Tomatoes can be delicate. They really do require daily attention. Too much water can make them burst open. Not enough water can stunt their growth. You have to find the perfect balance for your area of the country.
I plant mine in little hills so that when I water them, it takes in what it can hold and the rest trickles down. They do need a lot of sun, but you want to watch the temperature in your area. I live in the desert so I'm careful about the kind of tomato fences I put around mine. They can burn on the metal ones in the direct sun.
Finally, one of the things I've battled a lot are the dreaded bugs. There are horrible looking oversized tomato bugs that feed on your plants. Check them daily for these and aphids. I released ladybugs into my garden and they rid the whole thing of pests.
An extra step you might want to try is compost. I have my own composting bins and regularly put this around my plants. It's rich in nutrients that plants can draw on. It's make my canteloupes so sweet that they literally melt in your mouth.
Good luck.
2006-06-06 16:35:58
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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When you plant the tomato plant, make sure you dig the hole deep enough to also bury about 2-3 inches of the stem, carefully removing the bottom leaves in the process. Tomato plants will root out on the stem, thus making a stronger more durable plant. They need full sun and plenty of daily water. If you stop watering for a few day period, and then start up again with heavy water, the fruit will split open. The key is consistency. Make sure you cage or stake your plants. Staking is more tedious because you have to tie your plants about every other day...but they seem to produce better and the fruit is much easier to pick as apposed to cages. Make sure you pick off suckers on a daily basis, (the small branches that starts growing in the crook between a leaf stem and the main branch). If you allow those to grow, your plant will use it's energy on leaf and branch production instead of fruit production. Also, remember to store you tomatoes at room temperature if you need them to ripen more once they've been picked. Good luck
2006-06-06 16:50:53
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answer #2
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answered by mslorikoch 5
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It's important to find a variety that does well in your climate. (I found out by once growing tomatoes without flavor.) Use the small starter plants. Look for mites or shrivled or discolored leaves. If you buy at other than a nursery, get plants that just arrived from wholesale nursery. Tomatoes like full sun. Dig and put a little fertilizer in hole bottom, covering with layers of soil and with some potting soil. Pat down level, and insert tomato cages over each plant.Mulch. Water. Fasten new growth to cage as plant grows upward. Water and fertilize as needed. Ground should stay moist. Talk to retail help at garden shops for other questions, or consult reference books such as Sunset Magazine's gardening book for your region (soil type, etc.)
There are fruit growth-boosters such as those at "Gardens Alive" if you get enthusiastic. Have fun.
2006-06-06 16:56:23
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answer #3
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answered by JM afficionado 1
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I always mix compost into the holes or containers I put my tomatos in. I usually use composted cow manure. I also Miracle grow according to directions. When they blossom it's pretty much time to stop feeding them and let the fruits mature.
Tomatoes will feed through their leaves so even spraying the plants with a solution of miracle grow is good.
Do not water when the sun is up high. Early morning or late evening only. That goes for most plants. The water droplets on the leaves act as a magnifying glass and scalds them
2006-06-07 04:38:58
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answer #4
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answered by Carp 5
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First you get a pot of soil and fill it up and make an opening in the middle so then when you get a tomatoe plant you take it and its soil carefully out of its container and put it in the opening of the dirt in the pot. Then you carefully surround the roots of the plant with the soil. Make sure not to disturb the plants roots when taking it and its soil out of its container. Leave the plant outside and only water it if it doesn't rain a lot. Now wait for it to grow, it should take a couple of months.
2006-06-06 16:38:43
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes I do I use Osmocote to fertilize them i payed about $9.00 for the Osmocote at Lowe's: http://www.lowes.com/lowes/lkn?action=productDetail&productId=154954-446-27526&lpage=none I only bought one tomato plant it was about to die and now I have 10 preety big stalks and I just planted the tomato plant in January. I have about 100 tomatoes every week. I recommend also watering and you only have to use Osmocote once every four months and good luck on your tomatoes.
2006-06-07 07:41:32
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answer #6
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answered by cavosany_qtpie 2
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in case you recommend interior a house or position of abode i ought to assert no. some tomatoes are grown in greenhouses (interior heated glass enclosed homes) yet even those are undesirable high quality compared to those grown in soil, outside. you are able to plant and boost tomato seeds interior utilising a particular plant gentle, yet once the seeds grow to be flowers they want finished sunlight and soil.
2016-12-06 11:02:08
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Do it in a greenhouse, with the plants planted into Gro-bags. Buy the plants partially grown from a garden centre..... make sure you pick the strongest, healthiest looking plants they have.
Once planted, surround the plants with slug pellets or they'll get eaten (damn slugs & snails get everywhere). Water the plants daily (on the root, not on the leaves).
Make sure they're supported properly.
2006-06-06 16:40:24
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Mix grass clippings in the soil before you plant. Lot's of sun and water and use miracle grow.
2006-06-06 16:34:42
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answer #9
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answered by ☼Jims Brain☼ 6
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Try buying the ones that are already growing and plant them.
Beefsteak is a good variety.
Dont over water, wait till they are almost wilting.
2006-06-06 16:38:48
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answer #10
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answered by ? 6
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