I want to emphasize that the seedlings are much more resilient than I ever imagined. Here is the latest example.
In July, some creature picked through the sphagnum moss basket and scattered several seedlings around outside. I gathered them all up and planted them in plastic pots, again in sphagnum. Days later, I went outside one morning to once again find them all picked through and some lying around the pots and in the grass.
Thus I decided it was time for them to come back inside for the year.
I decided to experiment with a few seedlings that had been pulled out of their pots. I have quite a few pieces of hickory bark lying around, so I stuck these little seedlings to the bark with craft glue (Tacky Glue). They get sprayed a couple of times a day with water which sometimes includes a dilute amount of fertilizer. Here they are after about a month:
Let me reiterate that these are not in a greenhouse environment. They are in a sunroom in an east window at about 50% humidity. They are growing roots and new leaves. They are surviving! And once the trees outside shed their leaves for the winter, the sunroom will gain several more hours of morning light.
One note about the Tacky Glue - I was worried its chemical composition might be harmful to the plant. Well, one seedling has grown a fat root that pushed right through the glue, so what does that tell you?
These babies do not need an incubator or greenhouse conditions to grow. They are tough as nails provided they receive adequate light, moisture, and air circulation!
Now a couple of photos of the others potted in sphagnum:
There are two more pots with plants in lava rock—will snap some photos of them later.
Growing seedlings is awesome!!