If you've got a bright
enough location, or can provide some additional light for a hanging basket, you
might try growing a tomato plant or two indoors.
However, if you expect
to have a large healthy plant, you really need to wait until outside
temperatures are getting fairly warm. Tomato plants are really hot weather
plants, and will absolutely thrive with the onset of summer.
Tomato
plants have a tendency though to want to settle on the ground, which causes the
fruits to rot. They are also sensitive to too much moisture, which will cause
the fruits to break and split.
Recently, the Upside Down Tomato Garden
has become a trendy way to remedy these issues. There are now several different
types of hanging tomato products on the market that will allow you to grow your
tomatoes upside down. Most of them are fairly expensive though for growing a
single tomato plant.
A far more economical way of growing an upside down
tomato plant would be to simply get an inexpensive hanging basket that you
could hang up, and allow your tomatoes to just grow as they normally
would.
The question becomes, "How many of these hanging tomatoes could
you realistically have around your house?"...The answer: as many as you think
you can stand.
Personally, I believe that growing my tomatoes in the
ground, and placing a basket around each of them works just fine. They might
require you to do a little pruning throughout the season, and mabey some
thinning as well. You might even find that you need to tie some of them up to
keep them up off the ground.....
There's a certain amount of pleasure to
be had from tending your own garden, and spending time each day helping your
plants to be all that they can be. The challenges, the trials, the erors are
what gardening is all about.
The idea of spending $70 bucks on an Upside
Down Garden thing just doesn't make much sense to me. After all, the purpose of
growing my own fruits and vegetables, is to save money, and enjoy a better
product than what can be found at the store.
I want to have somewhere
between 30 and 60 tomatoe plants growing in my garden so that I can first, make
canned dilly green
tomatoes. Then, I want to enjoy fresh tomatoes all through the
growing season. Thirdly, I want to have enough tomatoes to can my supply for
the coming year so that I don't have to go to the store and buy canned tomatoes
and sauces that have been inundated with additives and preservatives.(read
some of the lables)
If you really think that you want to grow
tomatoes in a hanging type of situation, I would suggest building a raised bed
about 4 feet high, two feet wide, and the length should allow for two feet for
each tomato plant you intend to grow.
This way, your tomato plants will
have enough height off the ground to be able to hang down over the edge of the
raised bed without resting on the ground.
But it sure seems like a lot
of extra work. |
Herbs
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Winter
gardening
Seeds
Artichokes
Asparagus
Beans
Beets
Broccoli
Brussels
Sprouts
Cabbage
Cantaloupe
Carrots
Cauliflower
Celery
Corn
Cucumbers
Eggplant
Garlic
Kale
Kohlrabi
Leeks
Lettuce
Melons
Okra
Onions
Peas
Peppers
Potatoes
Pumpkins
Squash
Sunflowers
Tomatoes
Watermelons |