« View Post
Photos

Oops! Leave without saving?

If you leave this page, the information you have entered will not be saved!
Are you sure you want to leave this page?

Leave this page Stay on this page

Hometalk.com

  • Sign Up
  • or
  • Log In
  • Professionals
  • Community
    • All Members
    • Professionals
    • Bloggers
  • About
    • About Hometalk
    • Blog
    • FAQ
    • Guidelines
    • Resources
    • Support
    • Press
    • Contact
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
  • Following
  • All Topics
    • Cleaning & Organization
    • Crafts
    • Design & Décor
    • DIY Projects
    • Gardening
    • Home Maintenance & Repairs
    • Outdoor Living
    • Painting
    • Remodeling
    • Repurposing & Upcycling
    See More Topics »
  • Questions
    • All Questions
    • Open Questions
    • Unanswered Questions
  • Clips
Post & Ask
Join Now Log In

Hometalk is where people share and help with everything home & garden

Brenda H

Fayetteville, NC
2Likes
  • Overview
  • Comments3
  • Boards1
  • Clips2
  • Likes6
  • Following8
  • Send a Message

Recent Activity


  • Whether fresh or canned – we use tomatoes from our garden nearly every day of the year
  • Pick a bright, sunny location for your tomatoes
  • Crush a few egg shells in each of your holes to help prevent blossom rot
  • Pruning a few inches from the bottom of your plants allows for easy watering and increased air and light to reach your plants
  • Water around the base of your plants, and not on the leaves. It allows water to reach the roots and prevents mold
  • See 2 more photos

How To Grow Amazing Tomatoes This Year!

Without a doubt - tomatoes are the most important crop we grow in our garden.

In fact, we use ourhome-grown tomatoes and tomato based products nearly 365 days a year. ...»

In thesummertime - we eat them right off the vine, in salads, hamburgers, sauces andmore. In the fall and winter months, we enjoy the tomato juice, vegetable soup,chili, salsa, pasta sauce, pizza sauce, and ketchup that we have canned orfrozen from the summer's bounty.

Here are some valuablehints, tips and tricks we have learned over the years to grow a bumper crop oftomatoes:

1. The When, HowAnd Where Of Planting Tomatoes:

WHEN TO PLANT: Tomatoes are just about the last thing that getplanted in our garden. Tomatoes love warm soil and warm weather. Ifyou plant them too early in your growing season, they can really struggle. It'snot just about preventing frost. Cold, damp spring temperatures can make themmore susceptible to disease, rot and lethargic growth. Here in this partof Ohio, most of our garden goes in around the 15th of May. If its niceand warm out - the tomatoes go in too. But if it's still a little chilly anddamp - we wait until late May to allow the soil to warm up!

HOW TO PLANT: Tomatoes benefitfrom rich, fertile soil. When you plant - make sure to add a few cupsof good compost in the hole along with the plant. And start saving youreggs shells now! Crushed egg shells are an excellent supplement to add to yourplanting hole. They add calcium to the soil as they break down - helpingto prevent the all-too common blossom rot; those black spots on the ends oftomatoes that can decimate a garden. We drop in a few crushed egg shellsper planting hole.

WHERE TO PLANT: Plant yourtomatoes in the sunniest location you can find. It can't be said enough -tomatoes love sun and heat. The more you give them - the better your crop willbe! And remember to rotate where you plant them from year to year - ifyou keep planting those tomatoes in the same spot, they will rob the soil ofall the nutrients needed for great yields and become more prone to disease.

Mulching and Weeds:

We mulch our tomato plants with a 1to 2" thick layer of compost - creating a 6 to 8" compost circlearound each stalk. It helps to regulate soil temperature, keep weeds to aminimum, and soil from eroding during strong rains. Of more importance,it acts as a slow-release fertilizer as it strains through nutrients duringwatering or rainfalls. Mulching also helps keep weeds at bay. Don't let weeds compete for the same nutrients your tomatoesneed. Just a few minutes of daily maintenance pulling small weeds aroundyour plants will keep your garden productive and neat! Make sure as you work in your garden to stay off the ground directly around yourplants - stepping on and around your plan'ts root zone compacts the soil andkeeps them from fully developing.

One last note on mulching. Ifthe season and soil are still a little cool - wait a few weeks for it to warmup before applying the mulch. If the soil is still cool, mulching canactually prolong the soil from heating up.

Pruning andSupporting

Whether you use cages, stakes, or ahybrid system like we do (See Stake a Cage), it's critical to provide great support for yourtomato plants! It keeps them off the ground - away from pests and foottraffic, allowing tomatoes to ripen with good circulation and exposure tosunlight.

As the plants grow during the firstmonth - we like to prune out the bottom 3 to 4" of stems andshoots. Why? It makes plants easier to water, and once again allowsthat all important air and light to circulate through the plants and rows. It also makes it a little more difficult for garden bugs and pests tofind their way onto your plants.

Watering

Watering tomatoes (and for that fact,your entire garden), is as much about when to water, as it is how much. Never water during the heat of the day. Not only do you lose muchof it to evaporation, but you also can easily burn the foliage of the plants. The absolute best time to water is in the early hours between sunrise andmid-morning. Not only is it cooler and easier on the gardener, but yourplants are not stressing from the heat of the day either. Eveningwatering is your next best choice if you can't water in the morning, althoughit can create mildew if the water sits on leaves through the cool nights.

How Much Water? This is a bigone. When the plants are very young and for the first week or so, youmay need to water daily to get them established. After that - wateringevery day is a no-no. Established tomatoes need about 1 inch of water a week. If mother nature can't supply that - then you need to supplement. If you are experiencing a prolonged dry spell – water every two to threedays with about a 1/2″ of water to the plant at a time. This allowsenough water to go deep into the soil and create longer roots. Why notevery day? Plants that get a little water every day never send theirroots deeper to look for moisture and nutrients - and you end up with a weakroot system, leading to a weak plant.

Soil Fertility andFertilizing

Tomatoes need fertile soil to growstrong and healthy. If you follow along with our blog, you know we're notbig fans of man-made fertilizers - so what is the answer when it comes tofertilizing? Well, if you use compost in your planting holes and as a topdressing, work in green manure and cover crops to your soil in the fall orspring, and practice plant rotation - there really is no need for syntheticfertilizers to get a great crop of tomatoes.

If you want to give your plants anall natural boost - you can apply compost tea - a simple solution of watersoaked and steeped in fresh compost. The water absorbs the naturalnutrients from the compost and becomes an "all natural" liquidfertilizer. We apply it to the soil around the base of our plants (notthe leaves - it can burn them) a couple of times early in the growing season toget our plants off to a great start. Well, truth be told, we also do itso our plants can look a little bigger and brighter green than mybrother-in-laws :)

Happy Growing!

- Jim and Mary

If you would like to receive our DIY & Gardening Tips every Tuesday – be sure to sign up to follow the blogvia email in the right hand column, "like" us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter

Old World Garden Farms
Old World Garden Farms Newark, OH
80 Comments | Post Comment | 21424 Views
  • Brenda H
    Clipped on Mar 15, 2013 to Brenda H's Clipboard
  • Share 1.9K
  • Like 197
  • Clip 287
Clipped to:
  • Garden Ideas
  • OUTSIDE
Becky Sharon @ mrs. hines class Eclectically Vintage - Kelly FunkyJunk Interiors - Donna Leah Donna Dixson Karen - The Graphics Fairy + 1 more
  • Brenda H
    Followed 8 people on Feb 07, 2013
  • link for pic   http://www.braitmandesign.com/home-remodeling/plywood-flooring-attractive-inexpensive-option/

Flooring: Flooring choices

Hey y'all!

Have any of you flooring guys/gals out there ever installed high-quality plywood floors? If so, wondering how they hold up. Here's a pic and here's the link where I read about them. What do you all think?

Connie Nikiforoff Designs
Connie Nikiforoff Designs Mandan, ND
39 Comments | Post Comment | 2952 Views
  • Brenda H
    Clipped on Jun 27, 2012 to Brenda H's Clipboard
  • Share 38
  • Like 10
  • Clip 7
Clipped to:
  • Dream Home
  • Decor Magazine featured this well done design by Catherine Bitter. 8

The latest trend is white walls and fabric. Do you like this trend?

Culpepper Carpets and Interiors, Inc.
Culpepper Carpets and Int... Atlanta, GA
87 Comments | Post Comment | 3108 Views
  • Brenda H
    Commented on May 06, 2012
    To hard to keep clean.
  • Share 15
  • Like 21
  • Clip 2
Clipped to:
  • Living room
  • broken grill 2 2
  • gas grill that was off due to a leak in the line, was sitting there doing nothing but being ugly lol 5

broken grill makeover

I had a couple of old grills going to waste, i converted them into planters for fun. Im So not a gardener but it was fun and it was my first home and the patio looked barren and all i had ...»
was an overgrown bush, some tiger lillies and some weeds at the time.

'Raven E
'Raven E Chester, SD
56 Comments | Post Comment | 9721 Views
  • Brenda H
    Commented on May 06, 2012
    Love this idea and I;m going to do that with an old grill I have.
  • Share 567
  • Like 40
  • Clip 7
Liked by:
SheilaG, Plum Doodles Bernice H Caitlin M Glenda H Solutions Electric, Inc. Lora Wendy B Georgia R
  • See 28 more photos

Imposing Modern Residence in Malibu by The Ocean

through http://homedesignjournal.wordpress.com
Ricky
Ricky New York, NY
13 Comments | Post Comment | 2184 Views
  • Brenda H
    Commented on May 06, 2012
    It is beautiful and if you're rich enough you can have one just like it,for the rest of us we ...»
    can only dream of having a home like that.

  • Share 98
  • Like 8
  • Clip 1
  • Wall Murals and Custom Artwork by Amber Dawn 2

This is one couples solution to beautify a horrible plain white retaining wall in their back yard.

Not only was the wall blinding, it was an eye sore to their beautiful property. Since they could not remove it, and the cost of a remodel wasn't what they wanted, their solution was to paint their dream landscape trompe l'oeil mural. They customised the mural completely choosing the plants, mountains, fountain and even the pot and flowers growing around the outside. If you have a spot you just cant seem to find the right painting for, or a full construction and remodel arn't in your ...»
budget range, you can consider an affordable artist like myself to help you find what is right for you. No matter how large or small, we can create somthing new for you! Based out of both Boise and Orange County and serving the whole west cost! Designers are welcome to inquire and refer.

Amber D
Amber D
57 Comments | Post Comment | 8620 Views
  • Brenda H
    Liked on May 06, 2012
  • Share 96
  • Like 76
  • Clip 19
Clipped to:
  • Garden art beautiful
  • Design on a dime
  • I painted my propane tank to look like a watermelon with a ladybug on top. 1

My watermelon looking propane tank

Our propane tank is small since it only is used for our fireplace. The propane tank was rusted and unsightly. I painted it to look like a watermelon with a ladybug on top. It is in the shade all the time, so no danger of overheating due to paint.
Terry M
Terry M Quincy, IL
71 Comments | Post Comment | 3597 Views
  • Brenda H
    Liked on May 06, 2012
  • Share 250
  • Like 69
  • Clip 1
Liked by:
Ari G Miriam I Dante C Mr. Spinwall, LLC John Madison Landscape, Inc. Bonnie B Clay B Vicki T
Back
to top
Feedback