• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
The Art of Doing Stuff
menu icon
go to homepage
  • HOUSE
  • COOKING
  • GARDEN
  • HOW-TO
  • EXTRA
  • Subscribe
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
  • search icon
    Homepage link
    • HOUSE
    • COOKING
    • GARDEN
    • HOW-TO
    • EXTRA
    • Subscribe
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
  • ×
    Home » Garden Stuff

    How Many Seedlings Can You Grow in 24 Square Feet

    May 30, 2024 by Karen 6 Comments

    Pin7
    Share
    Email
    7 Shares

    The amount of seedlings you can start with 24 square feet is impressive. This is a quick count of everything I grew under lights this year before I start planting all the vegetables and flowers this weekend.

    Home grown seedlings getting hardened off on old wood workbench outside.

    The hard work of weeding the garden, adding compost and forming the unframed beds is done. All that's left to do is to actually plant the plants.

    Once that's done I'll repeat the weeding, compost and bed neatening with some pest control thrown in until October at which point I'll lose my grip on the shovels and wander aimlessly away from the garden because I'm sick of it all.

    But for now, I'm still in that optimistic, everything is going to grow beautifully, easily and it'll be no problem at all phase.

    This is just a list based on numbers, if you'd like to know about which varieties of everything I grow you can find that information in this post.

    Everything here was grown in my basement on:

    2, 4 tier shelving units with

    16, 3' long LED shop lights and

    An automatic capillary mat watering system

    Table of Contents

    • Started Seedlings
    • The Vegetables
    • The Flowers

    Started Seedlings

    4 tier shelf setup with seedlings.
    Red leaf lettuce
    Zinnia seedlings from Floret Originals.

    The Vegetables

    The Flowers

    1. Beets - 100
    2. Broccoli - 15
    3. Cauliflower - 8
    4. Hot Peppers - 7
    5. Kale - 4
    6. Lettuce - 15
    7. Luffah - 18
    8. Onions - 100
    9. Shallots - 30
    10. Sweet Peppers - 5
    11. Sweet Potatoes - 7
    12. Swiss Chard - 50 (??? why???)
    13. Tomatoes - 18

      TOTAL: 377 VEGETABLE PLANTS
    1. Amaranth - 20
    2. Celosia - 50
    3. Coleus - 10
    4. Cosmos - 20
    5. Dahlia - 40
    6. Hariy Balls - 4
    7. Lace Flower - 3
    8. Mignonette - 10
    9. Nasturtium - 5
    10. Petunia - 10
    11. Scabiosa - 5
    12. Sweet Peas - 24
    13. Zinnia - 35

      TOTAL: 236 FLOWER PLANTS

    I grew 613 plants in 24 linear feet.

    Would you like to save this stuff?

    We'll email you this post, so you can refer to it later.

    All my seedlings have now been taken from under the lights and gradually put outside to harden off, which is a process of acclimatizing them to the much rougher conditions they'll have to get used to out in the wild.

    Seed starting station of 2 shelving units and capillary mat watering system.
    Hardening off a variety of seedlings outside.

    An incredibly hot sun, falling rain and wind are all things your plants have never experienced before and they need to be introduced slowly to those elements.

    Healthy, sturdy, tomato seedlings grown at home under lights.
    Tomato leaf burned by too much sun when hardening off.

    In the photos above you can see some of my tomato seedlings looking strong and healthy, but if you look at the last photo you can see where one portion of the tomato leaf got hit by strong sun before it was properly hardened off.

    That portion of leaf is dried, crispy and dead. That one little part of leaf must have been sticking out from the shade on day 1 and it got scalded.

    If I'd just put the plants outside in the full sun from day one, the whole plant could have become dried and crispy just like the leaf.

    If you grew plants but haven't put them outside yet, learn about how to properly harden your plants off in about a week here.

    Dahlias, potted up, ready to plant out in the garden.
    Dahlias ready to plant.

    Growing these started in March and generally took an hour of work (seeding, repotting, watering & health checks) a night. That's about 75 hours (or 2 work weeks) to get over 600 seedlings grown and ready to plant.

    Street value? Probably about $2,000.

    Before you oooooo, ahhhhh or roll your eyes over all my healthy lifestyle choices you should know that planting day is usually followed by a compulsary McDonalds night as I explained a couple of years ago.

    Wish me luck, good weather and a cooperative intestinal journey this weekend.

    How Many Seedlings Can You Grow in 24 Square Feet

    More GARDEN stuff

    • The 2025 Dahlia Pageant: Meet the 21 Contestants
    • 5 Delicious Things To Make With Rhubarb
    • An Ice Cube Poppy Update 🧊
    • The Encyclopedia of My Vegetable Varieties

    Reader Interactions

    Comments

      Leave a Reply Cancel reply

      Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

      Recipe Rating




      The maximum upload file size: 512 MB. You can upload: image, audio. Links to YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and other services inserted in the comment text will be automatically embedded. Drop file here

    1. Marilyn

      June 01, 2024 at 10:27 pm

      WOW! Just WOW!

      Reply
      • Karen

        June 02, 2024 at 12:33 am

        Don't be too impressed. I killed 10 of them before being able to plant. ~ karen!

        Reply
    2. Joe Mota

      May 31, 2024 at 9:01 am

      Hi Karen Wondering what do you do to prep your garden soil eg. compost, manure, Do you add any chemical fertilizer? What do you like to do for pest control? thank you

      Reply
    3. Hettie

      May 31, 2024 at 1:15 am

      Good luck, Karen! I copied your shelves and lighting and fans and my seedlings grew beautifully, too. They went out last week and they're all thriving so far. Fingers crossed for a great season!

      Reply
    4. Randy P

      May 30, 2024 at 11:43 pm

      Yours is truly a labour of love. I would add that as a gardener you are outstanding in your field.

      Reply
      • Mary W

        May 31, 2024 at 4:45 pm

        LOL

        Reply

    Primary Sidebar

    SHOP ON AMAZON

    Use it 👆 to support my work. LEARN MORE

    My name is Karen Bertelsen and I was a television host. In Canada. Which means in terms of notoriety and wealth, I was somewhere on par with the manager of a Sunset Tan in Wisconsin.

    I quit television to start a blog with the goal that I could make my living through blogging and never have to host a television show again. And it’s worked out. I’m making a living blogging. If you’re curious, this is how I do that.

    So I’m doing this in reverse basically. I’m the only blogger who is trying to NOT get a TV show.

    More about me 👋

    Seasonal Articles

    • How to Replace a Broken Gas Grill Igniter.
    • The 5 Summer Projects That'll Make Your Summer Unforgettable
    • 🥔 How to Grow Cheatsheet - Potatoes in Zone 6
    • Spring Tune-Up: Sharpen It Now, Curse It Less Later
    • We Come In At Dark
    • How to Lay Sod for a Beautiful Lawn

    Popular Articles

    • This Is Where I Try To Buy Your Love
    • Guaranteed Crispy Sweet Potato Fries & Sriracha Mayo Dip
    • A Year Full of Pots: Win Sarah Raven's New Book
    • The Difference Between People Who Eat Mayo & People Who Eat Miracle Whip
    • Your FIRST look at my new kitchen in Canadian Living Magazine.
    • How to Print an Image on Wood.

    Footer

    as seen in

    About

    • About
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy

    Newsletter

    • Sign Up! for emails and updates

    Social

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    7 shares