








Timing is all about temperature in early spring, whether we’re transplanting young seedlings or sowing seeds. Patience pays off and a soil thermometer can be your best friend.
As spring bursts to life, it’s hard not to get swept up in the excitement and start planting straight away. But jumping the gun with tender seedlings before the soil has properly warmed can backfire, leading to poor germination, stunted growth, or even losing whole crops to a cold snap.
Regional climate differences see soil warming up at vastly different rates across the country. Northland will reach ideal temperatures earlier in the season than Canterbury and Otago. Using a soil thermometer is a simple and inexpensive way to check conditions before planting. Waiting until the soil is warm enough, we can avoid stunted seedlings and get our crops off to a strong, healthy start.
Cold, wet soil can cause seeds to rot or sit dormant for weeks, wasting time and resources. Most common vegetable seeds, including beans, corn, and cucumbers, require soil temperatures of at least 15°C to germinate reliably. Heat-loving crops like tomatoes, capsicums, and pumpkins need the soil to be closer to 18–20°C. Even cold-hardy crops such as carrots, lettuce, and peas prefer soil temperatures above 10°C for healthy development.
To help soil warm up faster, there are useful tactics such as covering beds with black plastic or cloches. Raised beds or containers filled with soil or potting mix also tend to warm up quicker than in-ground beds.
HINT: To help raise soil temperature, spread black plastic over your planting area two or three weeks prior to planting.

Apart from the immense sense of satisfaction and potential to save money, growing vegetables from seed offers a broad choice of exciting varieties to grow and eat.
A salad garden takes very little space and growing a variety of different leafy veges and herbs makes forever-interesting salads. Lettuces can be grown almost all year round, but they thrive in spring when temperatures are not too cold and not too hot.
Seed can be sown straight into garden beds or containers and then thinned out to give them space as they grow. Alternatively you can sow the seed into punnets or trays of seed raising mix for planting out later. This works well in spring if there is still a risk of frost. Starting out with weed free seed raising mix makes things a lot easier too, as it can be difficult to distinguish a tiny lettuce seedling from a tiny weed.
Take a clean seed tray, punnet or other recycled container with holes for drainage, and fill it with seed raising mix. Your tray only needs to be 4 to 6cm deep. If the mix is too deep it is not only wasteful but may be too wet and cold for baby seedlings.
Sprinkle the seeds over damp seed raising mix and then cover with a thin layer - no deeper than 3mm - of the mix. Keep the seeds moist while they germinate and start to grow. Spacing small seeds like lettuces is a fiddly task. It is far easier to sprinkle the seeds and when they need more space to grow, lift and replant them to give them more space. This is called ‘pricking out’.
An ice cream stick or plant label makes a handy tool for this job. After your seedlings have their first pair of true leaves (these look similar to the parent plant and appear after the very first seed leaves called ‘cotyledons’), lever out the roots of each seedling while holding the seedling by the leaves, not the delicate stem. Using your stick to make a planting hole, transplant your tiny seedlings into containers filled with fresh mix. Drop your seedling into the hole so that it is buried almost up to its lowest leaves then gently firm it in.
Pricking out helps avoid damping off disease which can kill off young seedlings when they are too over-crowded. However, depending on how thickly you have sown your seeds (and the weather), you may decide to skip the pricking out stage and plant straight into the garden. You can also avoid the need to prick out seedlings by raising seeds in ‘cell’ trays, sowing one or two seeds into each little compartment.
If young seedlings are moved straight from a warm room or greenhouse into the spring garden, they may be vulnerable to cold night temperatures. ‘Hardening off’ is the simple process of acclimatising them gradually to the cold by protecting them overnight (e.g. moving them back indoors) for a week or two before planting.
When your seedlings are ready for planting out, choose a sunny spot in your garden and enrich the soil with compost. A dibbler or narrow trowel makes easy work of spacing and planting seedlings. After planting, water thoroughly using a watering can or hose with a fine rose attachment. Water regularly to keep the soil moist as your lettuces grow.