Tips for Growing Tomatoes in Your
Garden
Copyright © 2011 by McGroarty Enterprises
Inc.
Tomatoes are without a doubt one of the most desirable vegetables to
grow in the home garden, and for good reason. Homegrown tomatoes are
highly nutritious and much more flavorful than those purchased at a
supermarket. Although some so-called experts claim there are numerous
mysterious and elaborate secrets to producing the perfect tomato crop,
growing tomatoes doesn’t have to be rocket science. Tomato plants will
produce an abundance of fruit for the home gardener if they are properly
planted and cared for.
Growing tomatoes requires a fairly long
growing season, and for this reason the seeds are typically planted
indoors about six to eight weeks before the seedlings can be planted in
the garden. To begin growing tomatoes, sow the seeds about a quarter
inch deep in small pots or flats in a soilless mix or sterilized potting
soil. It takes 7-14 days for the seeds to germinate at a temperature of
70-80 degrees Fahrenheit. The planting medium should be kept moist at
all times but should never become soggy. Placing plastic wrap loosely
over the pots or flats will help maintain the humidity levels necessary
for germination, but once the seedlings begin to sprout the plastic wrap
must be removed.
Bottom heat helps to speed the germination
process when growing tomatoes. Garden centers and catalogs sell heating
cables that are made just for this purpose, but you may also set the
pots or flats on top of your water heater to take advantage of its
warmth for germination.
Wanted!
People who would like to work at home
making and selling rooted cuttings.
As soon as the tomato seedlings emerge, they should be
moved to an area where they’ll receive full light, such as near a sunny
window or under grow lights. The seedlings should have light on them for
about twelve hours a day and should be kept at a temperature of 70-80
degrees. Fertilize the seedlings with a water-soluble fertilizer when
they’re about three to four weeks old, but dilute the fertilizer to half
the strength recommended on the label.
To begin growing tomatoes
that are picture-perfect, the seedlings need to be introduced slowly to
outdoor conditions. The little tomato plants will be accustomed to fairly
steady and warm temperatures while they’re growing indoors, and planting
them out directly in outside temperatures could come as quite a shock to
them, especially while nighttime temperatures are still cool. If the soil
is still cool when the seedlings are planted, the first sets of ripening
tomatoes may also have deformities that make them ugly or inedible.
About a week before it’s time to begin growing tomatoes in the garden,
begin to gradually introduce the seedlings to outdoor conditions. This is
called hardening off, and it simply involves moving the plants gradually
to the conditions they’ll experience in the garden.
Start hardening
off the little plants by moving them to an enclosed porch or another
sheltered area for a day or two, then move them to a sunny spot outdoors
that is protected from the wind. If the temperature threatens to take a
drastic downward dip, bring the plants back indoors until it warms up
again outside.
Click here to visit the
freeplants.com home page.
Tomatoes were originally found growing only in very warm
climates. They don’t like to be cold and should not be planted outside
until the danger of frost has passed and the soil has warmed up. That’s
typically late May or even early June here in northern Ohio.
The
sooner a gardener can begin growing tomatoes outside though, the sooner
they will begin to produce ripe fruit. There are a few tricks that make it
possible to plant tomatoes in the garden a bit earlier than is normally
recommended.
Garden soil may be warmed up by covering the area with
clear or white plastic for a few days prior to planting. The little tomato
plants will be much happier with their roots in cozy warm soil. Once the
plants are in the garden, their foliage can be protected from a light
frost by covering the plants with plastic gallon jugs that have their
bottoms removed, or with plastic or fabric sheets placed over the plants.
Floating row covers are also useful for protecting young growing tomatoes.
Suspend fabric, plastic or floating row covers over the plants using wire
hoops so it doesn’t touch the foliage. For more information on protecting
plants with floating row covers, go to
http://freeplants.com/floating-row-covers.htm

Get
this Ebook FREE along with a bunch of other really cool stuff just for
signing up for my Free Gardening Newsletter!
Click here to see
everything you get free.
You'll
love it. I promise! Click here.
When you are ready to transplant your tomato seedlings
into the garden, be sure to choose a spot for them that gets full sun for at
least eight hours a day. Dig a hole for each plant that is large enough to
easily accommodate all of the roots. Before transplanting, water the plants
well while they are still in their pots. This not only helps prevent
transplant shock, but it also makes it easier to slip the rootball from the
pot.
There are tricks to growing tomatoes that don’t apply to other
garden plants. Tomato plants will grow roots from any part of the stem that
is buried beneath the soil, so the plants will benefit from being planted
deeply, up to the first set of leaves. Some gardeners even go so far as to
remove the lowest set of leaves so their tomato plants can be buried even
more deeply. If the plants have spent too much time in their pots and have
become leggy, they may be planted in furrows with their too-long stems laid
in the furrow and gently buried with soil. This will help the plants develop
a strong root system while preventing the long stem from breaking in a
breeze.
Make
money growing small plants at home.
Mine have earned thousands!
We sold over $25,000. worth of our
little plants right from our driveway in a
matter of about six weeks!
Next, fill the planting hole with soil, pressing the
soil in firmly to eliminate any air pockets around the roots. Then give
the plants a good drink of water, thoroughly soaking the soil around
them.
If you plan on growing tomatoes on stakes or trellises, the
plants may be placed about two to three feet apart in the row. Plants
that will be allowed to sprawl on the ground will need more space
between them and should be planted four to six feet apart.
Start
Your Own Money Making Backyard Nursery!
Click here.
If the soil still feels a bit cool when planting the
tomato plants, your white or clear plastic may be recycled by placing it
on the ground beneath the plants to warm the soil. Once warmer
temperatures have settled in, this plastic should be removed to avoid
burning the plants’ foliage with reflective heat.
While growing
tomatoes, it is important to keep the plants’ leaves up off the soil to
prevent soil-borne diseases from attacking the plants. This can easily be
done by applying straw mulch around the plants. But straw mulch should
only be applied once the soil has warmed up above 70 degrees. If the mulch
is laid down while the soil is still cool, it will keep the soil from
warming up as it should and your tomato plants will suffer from cold feet
and could end up with blossom end rot. For more information on blossom end
rot, go to
http://freeplants.com/tomato-promblems.htm
Planting tomato plants properly is an important step
toward a bountiful harvest of sweet, juicy fruit. With careful planting,
adequate moisture and proper care, you too can grow the perfect tomato
crop.