>>300291Just be careful of the soil conditions, pests, and birds, squirrels, or moles who dig up and eat seedlings sometimes. In my area, theres lots of birds and the temperature is fickle so I'd rather play it safe and grow the seedlings indoors and slowly control how the plants get used to the outdoors (e.g. I can take them outside for hours at a time, leave them out when they get older, put them under a grow light vs having the little seedling fend off vs nature all on its own by planting the seed outdoors)
>>300384This is one of my mini greenhouses. I started it in a 72-ct. and move the seedlings to a 36 as soon as they sprout. Here is my pepper plant (in the very front), about 6 days old now. It is a Burpee Chinese Giant (Heirloom) Sweet Pepper. You can use the seed starter mix too but I like the peat pellets better as they really don't have any nutrients in them like seed starting mix (some mixes have small amounts of fertilizer included), and you can pull back the netting and transplant them easier rather than squish the plastic cells and risk hurting the roots which don't have much space to grow in. Make sure that once they sprout, you stop using the heat mat or else you'll end up with leggy (too tall) seedlings. Also, give them fresh air too and remove the dome for several hours a day.