Late last year I happened to find myself in Decorah, Iowa, home of Seed Savers Exchange, so I picked up a number of pepper seeds: Hungarian alma (apple), Fatalii, Mustard Habanero, Rooster Spur, and some Hot Portugal. About two weeks ago, I bought one of those 72-cell Burpee kits that hydrate themselves (with a mat that acts on capillary action to suck up water from the container it's sitting in) and contain little pellets of what I believe is called coir (coconut fiber), which you hydrate and place your seeds in. I'm sure the experienced from-seed growers know what I'm talking about. I planted two seeds in each cell.
Anyhow, it's been almost two weeks later, and the seedlings have started coming up. The almas, rooster spurs, and hot portugals are almost two inches in height. The habanero or fatalii are slowly making their way up, too, but still very young. (I expected them to take longer, given the climate they're most successful in.)
Now, how long am I supposed to keep these plants in the coir? The only time I've done seedlings before, it was in soil, and I transferred them into progressively larger containers, hardened them off, and planted them outside. What I'm reading on the Burpee site seems to suggest I'm supposed to keep them in the starter until I'm ready to plant them. Or not? Am I supposed to thin them out where there's two seedlings per cell? Or is it best to transplant them to soil when they reach a certain maturity? And, in that case, do I take the coir along with them, or do I separate the roots out and plant in the new soil?
And, by the way, if anyone wants some of these, I'm going to have far more than I know what to do with.