Garland Self-Watering Seed Propagator (12 Cell) | Capillary Matting
SKU: 72567473802

Garland Self-Watering Seed Propagator (12 Cell) | Capillary Matting

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Description

Garland Self-Watering Seed Propagator (12 Cell) | Capillary MattingThe proper indoor seed sowing solution for the busy gardener a clever self watering propagator system that delivers moisture to your seedlings exactly when they need it, removing the daily watering routine that traditional seed trays demand. The Garland 12 Cell Self Watering Seed Success Kit combines a water reservoir, capillary matting, 12 cell growing tray and clear humidity lid into one compact windowsill sized unit. At 10. 35 it's properly the

The proper indoor seed-sowing solution for the busy gardener — a clever self-watering propagator system that delivers moisture to your seedlings exactly when they need it, removing the daily watering routine that traditional seed trays demand. The Garland 12-Cell Self-Watering Seed Success Kit combines a water reservoir, capillary matting, 12-cell growing tray and clear humidity lid into one compact windowsill-sized unit. At £10.35 it's properly the right starting point for anyone serious about indoor propagation — sowing tomatoes, chillies, peppers, herbs or flower seedlings.

From Garland, the established British horticultural brand specialising in propagation, greenhouse and growing equipment. Made from recycled plastic; built to last multiple seasons.

Why self-watering matters for seed propagation

Successful seed starting depends on a properly delicate balance: warmth, moisture, airflow. Get any of these wrong and germination falters or seedlings damp off. Traditional seed trays require:

  • Daily watering vigilance — missing a single hot day on a sunny windowsill can dry out seedlings completely
  • Careful judgement — too much water and seeds rot; too little and they fail to germinate
  • Constant monitoring — particularly difficult if you work full-time, travel, or have multiple commitments
  • Risk of damping off — the fungal disease that flattens seedlings overnight in too-wet conditions

The self-watering system removes most of this guesswork. The reservoir keeps the capillary matting moist; the seedlings draw exactly the water they need through their roots; you check the reservoir level once or twice a week rather than checking compost moisture daily. Properly transformative for the busy gardener.

How the system works

The kit is built around three integrated components:

  • Water reservoir tray — sits at the bottom of the unit. You fill this with water; it holds enough for several days of plant uptake
  • Capillary matting — the technical heart of the system. Synthetic felt that draws water upward by capillary action, keeping itself constantly damp from the reservoir below
  • 12-cell growing tray — sits on a raised platform above the reservoir, with the bottom of each cell in contact with the matting. Each cell holds approximately 0.1L of compost; seedlings draw moisture through the compost from the matting as needed
  • Clear propagator lid — creates the warm humid environment that supports strong germination and early seedling development. Properly important for chillies, peppers, tomatoes and other warmth-loving seeds

The principle is simple: water sits in the reservoir, the matting wicks it upward, plants take only what they need. No overwatering, no drying out, no daily attention required. Just refill the reservoir when it runs low — typically once a week depending on temperature and stage of growth.

The 12-cell design — properly considered

Each cell measures 5cm x 4.7cm x 5.8cm deep with capacity for ~0.1L of compost. That's properly the right scale for:

  • Individual seedling development — each cell raises one or two plants, ready for transplanting at the right stage
  • Multiple varieties in one tray — sow 12 different chilli varieties, or six tomatoes and six aubergines, all in one compact unit
  • Proper root development — the 5.8cm depth gives genuine root run before transplanting becomes necessary
  • Quick cell-to-cell turnover — harvest seedlings as they become ready without disturbing slower-developing varieties

The 12-cell format is properly the right scale for a home gardener's spring sowing — substantial enough to raise a useful number of plants, compact enough to fit on a windowsill or in a small greenhouse.

What you'll grow in it

The propagator is properly suited to virtually all indoor seed sowing:

  • Tomatoes — the headline use; sow in February-April for summer cropping. The warmth from the lid and the steady moisture suit tomato seeds exactly
  • Chillies and peppers — need longer germination periods and consistent warmth; this propagator's controlled environment is properly the right tool. Try our chilli and pepper seed range
  • Aubergines — another warmth-loving Solanum that benefits from controlled indoor sowing
  • Herbs — basil, parsley, coriander, dill, chives, thyme, oregano, marjoram. Indoor propagation gives a head start on the season. See our herb seed range
  • Half-hardy annuals — cosmos, zinnia, antirrhinum, nicotiana, salvia. Sow indoors in March-April for May/June planting out
  • Microgreens — the small cell size suits short-cycle microgreen production for quick repeated harvests. See our microgreen seed range
  • Salad leaves — lettuce, rocket, mizuna, mustards for early-season harvests
  • Brassicas — cabbages, kales, broccolis, cauliflowers for transplanting into the vegetable garden
  • Cuttings propagation — the humid environment also works for taking soft cuttings of herbaceous perennials and shrubs

For anyone serious about indoor seed sowing, this kit is properly the right tool to do the job consistently rather than relying on hope and daily watering.

Particularly good for

  • First-time indoor seed sowers — the self-watering format removes much of the guesswork that puts beginners off propagation
  • Busy gardeners — full-time workers, parents of young children, anyone who can't water daily. Once-weekly reservoir refill rather than daily attention
  • Windowsill gardeners — 37.5cm overall fits most UK kitchen and conservatory windowsills properly
  • Small-space gardeners — flats, terraced houses, anyone without a greenhouse
  • Holiday gardeners — the reservoir holds enough water for several days; less anxiety about leaving plants over a weekend away
  • Cottage garden growers — raise the half-hardy annuals (cosmos, zinnia, antirrhinum) that make cottage borders sing
  • Kitchen garden growers — head-start tomatoes, chillies, peppers, aubergines for the summer harvest
  • Herb growers — year-round indoor herb propagation for fresh kitchen use
  • Microgreen growers — quick-turnover indoor production system
  • As a gift for a new gardener — properly the foundational kit for someone starting indoor propagation

Built to last — the sustainability story

Garland's design is properly considered for long-term use:

  • Made from recycled plastic — not virgin material; circular-economy approach
  • Designed for repeated use — this isn't a single-season disposable product; expect multiple years of seasonal use
  • Dishwasher-safe — the trays can be cleaned and sterilised between batches, preventing disease carry-over from one sowing to the next
  • Replacement parts available — if the matting becomes worn or stained over many seasons, replacement capillary matting is widely available

For the gardener who cares about reducing waste, this is properly the right tool — you're not throwing away dozens of disposable seed trays each season.

Where this sits in our propagation range

This is properly the anchor product for indoor seed sowing — alongside our other propagation and growing essentials:

  • Garland 12-Cell Self-Watering Propagator (this) — indoor seed sowing system; £10.35
  • Fungus Gnat Treatment Bundle — the natural pest protection partner for indoor seed trays; £15.00
  • Fungus Gnat Nematodes — standalone nematode treatment; £9.00
  • Smart Garden Digital Max/Min Thermometer — greenhouse and propagator temperature monitoring
  • Garland Plant Protection Fleece — for hardening off seedlings once moved outside

Together these form the complete indoor-to-outdoor propagation kit — sow indoors in the propagator, protect from fungus gnats with the nematode treatment, monitor temperature, then move outside with frost protection from the fleece. Properly considered as a seasonal growing system.

Specifications

  • Brand: Garland (British horticultural specialists)
  • Type: Self-watering propagator kit with capillary matting
  • Cells: 12 individual cells
  • Cell dimensions: 5cm x 4.7cm x 5.8cm deep
  • Compost capacity per cell: Approximately 0.1L
  • Overall length: 37.5cm (windowsill-friendly)
  • Includes: Water reservoir tray + capillary matting + 12-cell growing tray + clear propagator lid
  • Material: Recycled plastic; dishwasher-safe for sterilisation
  • EAN: 5031670003126

About Garland

Garland is an established British horticultural brand specialising in propagation, greenhouse and growing equipment. They've supplied UK growers for decades with the practical kit that makes indoor and undercover gardening work properly. Their products are widely used in commercial nurseries as well as home gardens. We stock their range because they make tools that genuinely improve outcomes for the home grower.

A small thought: there's a particular pleasure in walking past the kitchen windowsill in early spring and seeing the first proper green shoots emerging from a tray of carefully sown seeds — tomato seedlings opening their first true leaves, chilli seeds breaking the surface after three patient weeks, herb seedlings already smelling faintly of basil or coriander. The self-watering propagator quietly takes care of the daily moisture management, leaving you free to enjoy the proper magic of seed germination unfolding. A properly considered piece of kit that transforms indoor seed sowing from anxious chore to confident pleasure.

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SKU: 72567473802

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Thaumagnost
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
An Informative Introduction Based on Current Academic Studies of Western Esotericism
Format: Hardcover
This introductory text is the fruit of a fairly new field of recognized academic studies which developed as a result of the pioneering literary efforts of scholars such as D. P. Walker (1914 - 1985) and Frances A. Yates (1899 - 1981) who took the subject of Western esotericism seriously rather than denigrate it as an area filled with superstition and irrationalism as many earlier scholars in different specialized fields had done. Other scholars of esotericism who have contributed to this growing field include but are not limited to Henry Corbin, Francois Secret, Antoine Faivre, Arthur Versluis, Joscelyn Godwin, and Wouter Hanegraaff, the last being the senior editor of the landmark Dictionary of Gnosis and Western Esotericism (2005), a collaborative effort by many scholars. Goodrick-Clarke is also a recognized scholar in this field and introduces it to the reader in his own introduction which also addresses the question of how esotericism is defined by those dedicated to studying it. As clarified in the introduction, Western esotericism is rooted in the Hellenistic philosophy of classical paganism as expressed in Alexandrian Hermeticism, Neoplatonism, and Gnosticism which have syncretized with the three Abrahamic religions of Judaism, Christianity and Islam, leaving vital traces within each. Through the Italian Renaissance, a Hermetic revival occurred as a result of the rediscovery of ancient texts which further resulted in the development of magic, astrology, alchemy, and Cabala through prominent individuals such as Marcilio Ficino, Pico della Mirandola, Johannes Reuchlin, Johann Trithemius, Henry Cornelius Agrippa, John Dee, and Paracelsus, each given significant attention. The development of German Naturphilosophie, Christian theosophy through Jacob Boehme and his followers (such as Gichtel, Pordage and Law), and Pietism are also covered before thoroughly introducing us to Rosicrucianism in the early 17th century, high-grade Freemasonry and Illuminism in the 18th century, and the ideas and practices of Emanuel Swedenborg and Franz Anton Mesmer which significantly impacted esotericism. Within the context of Rosicrucianism, the content of the manifestos are discussed along with Johann Valentin Andreae and the Tubingen Circle; in England, Michael Maier, Robert Fludd, and Comenius and the Origins of the Royal Society are covered. The impact of Rosicrucianism and theosophy on Freemasonry are explored as well as the following types of Freemasonry: "Scottish" and Chivalric, German Templar, and Egyptian. Within the context of Freemasonry and Illuminism, the following are also discussed: Martines de Pasqually and the Elect Coens, Louis Claude de Saint-Martin, Martinesism, Martinism, Willermozism, The Illumines of Avignon, and Count Cagliostro. Not only are the ideas of Swedenborg and Mesmer presented but also how they contributed to spiritualism and healing movements in the 19th century, including the United States which birthed Andrew Jackson Davis as the main theologian for spiritualism; Phineas Parkhurst Quimby, Warren Felt Evans and others who developed the New Thought Movement; and Mary Baker Eddy who founded Christian Science. A separate chapter is dedicated to ritual magic from 1850 to the present. Within this chapter, one is introduced to Eliphas Levi and the French Occult Revival, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn and its members, and special attention is given to the contributions of A. E. Waite, Aleister Crowley and Thelemic magick, and Dion Fortune and the Inner Light. I was, however, disappointed to see the section on Crowley end with the following: "Gerald Gardner (1884 - 1964), the founder of modern witchcraft, introduced Crowleyan magick into the neopagan Wiccan movement." For a better understanding of the influential role of Crowley and ritual magic, including the grimoires, on Wiccan practices, I recommend Wicca: Magickal Beginnings (2008) by Sorita d'Este and David Rankine. Helena Blavatsky and her Theosophical Society are given a separate chapter which expounds on her influences, travels, developing doctrines, and legacy. The last chapter titled "Modern Esotericism and New Paradigms" discusses theosophical heirs such as Annie Besant, Charles W. Leadbeater, and Rudolph Steiner (who developed his own religious system called "Anthroposophy"). It also has a section on Fourth Way Groups, introducing Gurdjieff and Ouspensky. Additionally, it covers the scientization of esotericism, New Age science, and Carl Jung's influence on esotericism. One individual I would have liked to see introduced within the context of Steiner is Valentin Tomberg who anonymously wrote Meditations on the Tarot: A Journey into Christian Hermeticism which is recognized by some, including esoteric scholar Antoine Faivre, as a masterpiece of 20th century esoteric/mystical literature. Goodrick-Clarke's book not only includes valuable footnotes and recommendations for further reading for each chapter, but also includes a helpful index as well as over 30 illustrations comprised of portraits, diagrams, plates, charts and other relevant pictures to supplement the text. This historical introduction to Western esotericism deserves wide readership.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 26, 2009
K
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Kevin Fuller
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
The Tradition Lives
Format: Hardcover
Throughout the Christian experience, Christianity has been a religion of the heart, perhaps best represented by the exoteric outer symbol and ritual of the Tradition. However, the Spirit will not go lacking, and there have been those individualistic and Protestant minded folks who have injected the Christian experience with Pagan influence in order to better satisfy the mind. Sources have included the towering Plato and Plotinus, while the Egyptian influence has been the quiter yet rangier philosophy of Hermes Trismegistus. Whereever the Christian Revelation has intersected with this Greek and Egyptian Rationalism, the product has resulted in Western Esotericism. The Tradition has quietly lived through millenia of possible persecution, martyrdom and certainly marginalization, yet has survived all the same. This book puts a glass to this Tradition and puts it in perspective, and expertly in my view. Major players are highlighted and minor counterparts are covered as well. Each participant, whether it by Mirandola compiling the Christian Kabbalah, or Paracelsus pushing past Galen to bring medicine to the door step of empiricism, all have added their own unique vision to the bigger picture of Western Esotericism. Though the Tradition has it's roots in Egyptian and Greek Mystery Schools, it has been preserved, since the fall of the Roman Empire by Secret Societies such as Rosicrucianism, Freemasonry and even Theosophy and proves to be a viable option yet today for those who seek a deeper more inner sacred experience than what perhaps their outer religious profession provides. Wondering? This is a good place to start.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2009
F
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Florida Man
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 4
Serious[ly]
Format: Hardcover
This book is exactly what the title claims - a historical introduction. While although the author doesn't go into a great deal of depth, he more than makes up for it in breadth. The author starts with an attempt at defining what exactly esotericism is. After that, the book is arranged chronologically, starting with Hellenistic esotericism and proceeding through the Renaissance, the Enlightenment and up to the present. Each chapter centers on an individual or group of individuals who were influential thinkers in their time and place. At the end of each chapter, there is a list of books for further study, much like a textbook. It is serious; it is scholarly. It is most definitely not silly. If you are at all interested in a "Third Way", which is neither mainstream religion nor strictly empirical "scientism", this may be a gooding jumping-off point for you, as it was for me.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 18, 2014
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JA
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
An amazing book that teaches a great history
Format: Kindle
This is a great book that takes the reader on an amazing journey through a part of Western history that is rarely taught. This book teaches the other side of the development of Western religion and after reading this book I now have a knew light on previous theological education. It is easy to understand but does not compromise on scholastic research and standards.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2014
G
Grant Hemingway
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Probably The Best Introduction to Western Esotericism Available
Format: Hardcover
I recently completed my MA in Western Esotericism at the University of Exeter and studied under Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke. He is the Director of the Exeter Centre for the Study of Esotericism (EXESESO) at the University of Exeter. This book is structured in the same fashion as the MA program at Exeter and provides a comprehensive overview of the key topics in the field of Western esotericism. The book is chronological and begins in ancient Alexandria, through the Italian Renaissance, post-Reformation Germany and into the Age of Enlightenment. Goodrick-Clarke covers complex topics such as Hermeticism, Neo-Platonism, Alchemy, Freemasonry, Rosicrucianism and Theosophy but makes it understandable even to novice readers. The underlying theme behind the subject of Western esotericism is the continuity in the different schools of thought that can be traced though the two thousand period from ancient Alexandria to the present day. This is a subject that has been overlooked for many years due to its association with the occult and magic. Thanks to the work of Goodrick-Clarke and scholars such as Antoine Faivre and Wouter Hanegraaff it is now being given the respect it deserves. This is an excellent starting point for anyone interested in learning more.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 24, 2011

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