Ittiz,
As usual Latt has given you some good advice. I started growing wild-sim in the fall of 2010 and have some video's showing my plantings the first year and second on my youtube channel.
Below is a link to my youtube channel - lots of ginseng video's there. Look for the two part video named Planting Wild-Simulated Ginseng.
It shows how I do a slightly modified rake and scatter method that, does take more time, but does get the seeds covered with some dirt (not just leaves).
www.youtube.com/yttnhunter
Below is a decent text description of how to plant wild simulated.
TNhunter
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1 pound of seed = approximately 7000 seeds.
Recommended planting bed size 5'x50' (250 sf).
Plant seeds at a rate of 4-5 per sq ft. In Scotts book he suggest that at a good site if you plant 4-5 per sq ft, to expect 1-2 to survive to harvest.
I can't say for sure how many will survive to harvest at my site and I am sure that varies quite a bit by site. I would be happy with the rate that Scott mentions, but I know Latt speaks from experience, so I sort of expect more like what he says.
1000-1250 seeds per 250 sq ft planting bed.
One pound of seeds will make 6-7 beds.
Time per planting bed 45-90 minutes depending on how hard you go at it and the conditions of your specific site.
Step by Step:
1.. Clear the bed area of any large rocks, logs, small saplings, etc.
2.. Rake the leaves off a 5x50 sf area, just pile them up along the side of the bed.
3.. Scratch up the soil surface good to loosen it up. I recommend that you rake some of the top soil over to the edge of the bed and just pile it up along side your leaf pile.
4.. Drop your seeds at a rate of 4-5 per sq ft.
5.. Rake the top soil back on top of the bed, covering your seeds as much as possible.
6.. Rake leaves back on and walk it down (walk over ever sq inch of the bed) to compress leaves down on seeds, making sure seeds have good soil contact.
Tools needed:
A axe/mattock or grubbing hoe type tool is good for digging out small saplings.
Heavy Duty leaf rake. I have one 3' wide with pointed teeth that does a excellent job.
Ginseng seems to grow best in soil with a PH around 5.5 and with Calcium levels at least 2000 pounds per acre, with levels in the 3000-5000 range being even better. Gypsum can be used to increase Calcium levels without affecting the PH.