Title: GROWING GREENHOUSE VEGETABLE TRANSPLANTS
1GROWING GREENHOUSE VEGETABLE TRANSPLANTS
Original Power Point Created by Myron K.
Sellers Modified by Georgia Agricultural
Education Curriculum Office June 2002
2ADVANTAGES
- Early and uniform transplants.
- Healthier plants.
- Less transplant shock.
- Earlier harvest of vegetables.
3CONSIDERATIONS
- Requires capital investment.
- Requires intensive management.
- Crop failures due to insects, disease, and
equipment failure.
4CROPS GROWN FROM TRANSPLANTS
- Peppers
- Tomatoes
- Cabbage
- Broccoli
- Onion
- Watermelon
- Squash
5GROWING THE TRANSPLANT
6Seeds are direct seeded into a plastic or
styrofoam tray filled with soil less media.
7Trays are placed on a t-rail system of benches.
8Automated watering booms are used to irrigate.
9Irrigation is controlled by an electronic
controller.
10Fertilizer is injected into the irrigation system.
11Cooling the greenhouse.
- Fans are used to exhaust hot air.
- The sidewalls of some greenhouses lower to allow
warm air to escape.
12Heating
- Gas-fired heaters are usually necessary to grow
tomato, pepper, squash, and watermelon
transplants.
13Insects, diseases, and weeds must be intensively
managed.
14Transplants are grown 4 to 6 weeks before
planting in the field.
- One worker is assigned to 6,000 sq. ft. of
greenhouse space. - He is responsible for the growing process from
seeding to maturity.
15Transplants are bundled for retail sales.
16Farmers often take the transplants to the field
in the growing tray.
17Many of the transplants are grown to harvest
using plasticulture.
18The amount of greenhouse grown vegetable
transplants is increasing because the plants are
uniform and the harvest is early.