Gardening - Planting Tomatoes By Michael Russell
Tomatoes are one of the most valuable crops to grow
at home - not because of their cost but because you can
grow varieties that the shops do not sell. Tomatoes selected
for thin skins and flavour rather than the ability to
travel and shelf life.
In this article we're going to discuss the planting of
tomatoes.
This isn't something to try if you're new to gardening.
Tomatoes
need special care.
To begin with, tomatoes need a minimum of six to eight
hours of
sunlight each day to grow well, and full sunlight is
recommended
especially if you live in the more northern cooler climates.
The soil should be well drained with a pH of around
6.0 to 6.8
in cooler climates. Plant your tomatoes in the spring
well after
the last frost and frost danger is past. Of course there
is
always going to be that freaky April day where temperatures
dip
below 32 (0 deg C) but these days will be very rare.
In hot climates, try
to plant your tomatoes when temperatures begin to drop
in the
early fall.
The tools and materials you're going to need for planting
your
tomatoes are compost, a trowel, garden fork or tiller,
plant
supports such as cages and stakes, and plant ties.
First thing you'll need to do is prepare the plants.
In order to
harden transplants to the elements, give them at least
a week to
ten days of transition time between indoor and outdoor
growing
conditions. Start off by placing the plants in dappled
shade and
make sure they're protected from strong winds. Make sure
you
bring them in the house at night. As time goes by, gradually
give them more exposure to the sun and wind. Eventually
you'll
be able to leave them out overnight. If it looks like
there is
going to be a frost, bring them back inside.
Next thing you have to do is prepare the soil. Mix the
soil with
composted manure until it's loose for at least six to
eight
inches into the ground. Mix the soil with a rototiller
or garden
fork. Test the pH of the soil. If the test shows that
the pH
needs to be adjusted, add limestone or sulfur as is needed.
After the soil is prepared, you can transplant. Bury
the tomato
stems up to the plant's second set of leaves, digging
a ten to
eighteen inch deep hole, if you need to. Fill up the
hole with
amended soil. Eventually, roots will form along the buried
stem.
Wrap a newspaper collar around the stems to protect the
plants
from cutworms.
Finally, you need to install support. You'll have a
number of
options for staking tomatoes. There is however, one method
that
is most common. In this method you'll position wire cages
over
the plants. Use five feet tall galvanized wire mesh and
make
cages twelve to thirty inches in diameter. You're going
to need
about three feet of mesh for every foot of diameter.
Fasten the
cages to short stakes driven into the ground so that
they don't
fall over.
Some tips about growing your tomatoes. For one thing,
they'll
usually stop growing at a certain height but some varieties
grow
taller than others. Dwarf varieties grow only 2 to 3
feet tall
and will give you cherry-tomato-sized fruits. Keep your
tomatoes
well watered through the growing season so you don't
end up with
disfigured fruits. Finally, fertilize very carefully.
Too much
nitrogen will give you more foliage than fruit.
There's a six part article on growing
tomatoes on this site that may help you as well.
About the author:
Michael Russell Your Independent guide to Gardening
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