Seeds vs. Transplants: What's Best in East Texas
- Melisa Johnson
- Feb 10
- 2 min read
Updated: Feb 19
One of the biggest questions I get every growing season is: “Should I start from seed or buy transplants?”
And the honest answer? It depends.
Not on what the internet says. Not on what your neighbor does. Not on what "looks" impressive.
It depends on your time, your patience, and your goals. So let’s make it make sense.
Starting From Seed

Starting from seed means you’re growing the plant from the very beginning. Indoors under lights. On shelves. In trays.
Seeds are great if:
You want more variety options
You’re planning ahead
You have some experience, space and light to support seedlings
Seeds require:
Time (6–8 weeks for tomatoes and many veggies)
Consistent watering
Light (more than most windows provide)
A lot of patience
Starting seeds can be rewarding.
But it’s not required to be a “real gardener.”
🪴 Buying Transplants

Transplants are young plants already started for you. You skip the indoor seed phase and start with a healthy plant ready for the garden.
Transplants are great if:
- You're short on time
- You don’t want grow lights in your house
- You want less guesswork
- You’re new to gardening
Transplants are not cheating. In fact, it's a smart option.
Especially in East Texas, where our growing season moves quickly and it goes from beautiful spring weather to scorching heat pretty fast.
Gardener's Perspective
When you walk into a garden center at the start of any growing season, you’ll see early transplants show up — herbs, cool-season vegetables, annual flowers, all sorts of wonderful plants and supplies.
That doesn’t mean you’re behind if you didn’t start seeds. It means you have options.
Seeds give you control. Transplants give you momentum.
You can grow excellent plants from seed. You can grow excellent plants from transplants.
Both both options work.
The Simple Takeaway
If you:
Love the process → start seeds.
Love results without extra setup → buy transplants.
Feel overwhelmed → buy transplants.
Want to experiment → try both.
And for the record, we do a bit of both.



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