View Full Version : Young tomato plants
jammer
21-03-2003, 03:20 AM
Do they dislike greenhouse situations and need moving air by chance?
My 12 are about 5 inches high with lots of leaves. They have been in
the mini greenhouse with the melons, clematis, and water iris. The
tomatoes do not need water but the leaves are curling. Today was a
crappy day (cold and windy and cloudy) but i will be able to give them
fresh air every day until they get put in the ground now. Just not
nights. Oh yeah, and they are still in the plastic packs they came in,
should i transplant to bigger pots? I have over a week til i can
plant.
·.·´¨ ¨)) -:¦:-
¸.·´ .·´¨¨))
jammer
((¸¸.·´ ..·´
-:¦:- ((¸¸
Trish K.
21-03-2003, 04:44 AM
oooops, greenhouses have moving air, if you are keeping them in a
little glass box, i suppose that could work against you
jammer
21-03-2003, 04:56 AM
On Fri, 21 Mar 2003 04:06:29 GMT, Trish K. > wrote:
>oooops, greenhouses have moving air, if you are keeping them in a
>little glass box, i suppose that could work against you
well, oops, this one doesnt, nor is it a little glass box.
Nevermind
·.·´¨ ¨)) -:¦:-
¸.·´ .·´¨¨))
jammer
((¸¸.·´ ..·´
-:¦:- ((¸¸
If you are in zone 7a (from a previous post), you've got longer than a
week before you can safely put tomatoes outside. Is your greenhouse
heated? They may even be too cold in that . I can't imagine too many parts
of the country outside of the extreme southwest that can plant tomatoes
out in March..........I'm in zone 8 and we don't even consider it until
Mother's Day..........
pam - gardengal
jammer wrote:
> Do they dislike greenhouse situations and need moving air by chance?
> My 12 are about 5 inches high with lots of leaves. They have been in
> the mini greenhouse with the melons, clematis, and water iris. The
> tomatoes do not need water but the leaves are curling. Today was a
> crappy day (cold and windy and cloudy) but i will be able to give them
> fresh air every day until they get put in the ground now. Just not
> nights. Oh yeah, and they are still in the plastic packs they came in,
> should i transplant to bigger pots? I have over a week til i can
> plant.
> ·.·´¨ ¨)) -:¦:-
> ¸.·´ .·´¨¨))
> jammer
> ((¸¸.·´ ..·´
> -:¦:- ((¸¸
>
>
Tom Jaszewski
21-03-2003, 01:32 PM
On Fri, 21 Mar 2003 12:26:38 GMT, Pam > wrote:
> I can't imagine too many parts
>of the country outside of the extreme southwest that can plant tomatoes
>out in March..
and even there many of the most successful tomato gardeners wait
until April. I've managed to get plants to survive planting in Feb.
but with NO increase in production.
"As crude a weapon as a cave man's club the chemical barrage has been hurled at the fabric of life."
Rachel Carson
jammer
22-03-2003, 03:08 AM
On Fri, 21 Mar 2003 12:26:38 GMT, Pam > wrote:
>If you are in zone 7a (from a previous post), you've got longer than a
>week before you can safely put tomatoes outside. Is your greenhouse
>heated? They may even be too cold in that . I can't imagine too many parts
>of the country outside of the extreme southwest that can plant tomatoes
>out in March..........I'm in zone 8 and we don't even consider it until
>Mother's Day..........
>
>pam - gardengal
I know, i know, i have been trying to jump the gun for a month. Thanks
for putting me in my place. Yes, i have a week or more, you are
correct. This "greenhouse" is a small shelf unit with a zippered
plastic cover. Everything but the tomatoes like it. My cantalopes are
vining and my clematis is going to be all tangled if i don't do
something.
I have a week and you have til Mother's Day. Something is wrong with
that.
I took my tomato plants out and potted in individual pots. I had a
weak extra and palnted it in the flower bed just for giggles. I gave
them 2 hrs of sun, watered well, and they look fine now. I will take
them out every day (not in the greenhouse) until i can plant in the
ground. I think they really like fresh air. Live and learn i always
say!
·.·´¨ ¨)) -:¦:-
¸.·´ .·´¨¨))
jammer
((¸¸.·´ ..·´
-:¦:- ((¸¸
jammer
22-03-2003, 03:08 AM
On Fri, 21 Mar 2003 13:23:24 GMT, Tom Jaszewski >
wrote:
> and even there many of the most successful tomato gardeners wait
>until April. I've managed to get plants to survive planting in Feb.
>but with NO increase in production.
That's just it. I have planted in February. You just never know about
this crazy place's weather!!!!!
zone 7a
·.·´¨ ¨)) -:¦:-
¸.·´ .·´¨¨))
jammer
((¸¸.·´ ..·´
-:¦:- ((¸¸
Dwayne
22-03-2003, 03:20 AM
If they aren't too big you can cut the bottom off of a 2 liter coke bottle
and cover them if a frost is expected. If they are too big for that, use a
bucket, or a piece of plastic held over them with a frame of something
suitable. Take the plastic off the next day again when it warms up.
Dwayne
"jammer" > wrote in message
...
> On Fri, 21 Mar 2003 12:26:38 GMT, Pam > wrote:
>
> >If you are in zone 7a (from a previous post), you've got longer than a
> >week before you can safely put tomatoes outside. Is your greenhouse
> >heated? They may even be too cold in that . I can't imagine too many
parts
> >of the country outside of the extreme southwest that can plant tomatoes
> >out in March..........I'm in zone 8 and we don't even consider it until
> >Mother's Day..........
> >
> >pam - gardengal
>
> I know, i know, i have been trying to jump the gun for a month. Thanks
> for putting me in my place. Yes, i have a week or more, you are
> correct. This "greenhouse" is a small shelf unit with a zippered
> plastic cover. Everything but the tomatoes like it. My cantalopes are
> vining and my clematis is going to be all tangled if i don't do
> something.
>
> I have a week and you have til Mother's Day. Something is wrong with
> that.
>
> I took my tomato plants out and potted in individual pots. I had a
> weak extra and palnted it in the flower bed just for giggles. I gave
> them 2 hrs of sun, watered well, and they look fine now. I will take
> them out every day (not in the greenhouse) until i can plant in the
> ground. I think they really like fresh air. Live and learn i always
> say!
>
>
> ·.·´¨ ¨)) -:¦:-
> ¸.·´ .·´¨¨))
> jammer
> ((¸¸.·´ ..·´
> -:¦:- ((¸¸
>
>
Dr. Rev. Chuck, M.D. P.A.
22-03-2003, 07:56 AM
Dwayne wrote:
>
> If they aren't too big you can cut the bottom off of a 2 liter coke bottle
> and cover them if a frost is expected. If they are too big for that, use a
> bucket, or a piece of plastic held over them with a frame of something
> suitable. Take the plastic off the next day again when it warms up.
Or use Wall-O-Water towers.
Dr. Rev. Chuck, M.D. P.A.
22-03-2003, 07:56 AM
jammer wrote:
>
> Do they dislike greenhouse situations and need moving air by chance?
> My 12 are about 5 inches high with lots of leaves. They have been in
> the mini greenhouse with the melons, clematis, and water iris. The
> tomatoes do not need water but the leaves are curling. Today was a
> crappy day (cold and windy and cloudy) but i will be able to give them
> fresh air every day until they get put in the ground now. Just not
> nights. Oh yeah, and they are still in the plastic packs they came in,
> should i transplant to bigger pots? I have over a week til i can
> plant.
For now, repot them in milk cartons. Deep, up to their last set of leaves.
They'll develop a nice set of feeder roots along the stems, which by
now must look quite leggy.
volts500
22-03-2003, 12:08 PM
"Pam" > wrote in message
...
> If you are in zone 7a (from a previous post), you've got longer than a
> week before you can safely put tomatoes outside. Is your greenhouse
> heated? They may even be too cold in that . I can't imagine too many parts
> of the country outside of the extreme southwest that can plant tomatoes
> out in March..........I'm in zone 8 and we don't even consider it until
> Mother's Day..........
>
> pam - gardengal
I'm in zone 9b....Central Florida. We planted 9 tomato seedlings on Feb.
24th. So far they are growing well and flowering.....2 ft. tall x 2 ft.
wide. 2 years ago I waited until just before Mothers day to set out
seedlings and the tomato plants and fruit later suffered from too much heat
exposure..........so I though I'd try to plant as early as possible this
year.
MLEBLANCA
22-03-2003, 04:20 PM
In article >, Pam > writes:
>of the country outside of the extreme southwest that can plant tomatoes
>out in March..........I'm in zone 8 and we don't even consider it until
>Mother's Day..........
>
>pam - gardengal
>
I am in zone 8 in the Central Valley of California. I have planted
tomatoes as early as March 15. Sometimes the late date is
April 15. This year will probably be around April 1st. I just
check the night temps; they're in the 50s now. When they
stabilize some, then out will go the toms. The ground is
warming up nicely.
A good coverup for cold nights is an inverted 5 gallon pot.
Covers most size plants and has "air vent holes" for those
sunny mornings so the plants don't "cook"
Emilie
Norcal Central Valley
zone 8
Anna Merchant
22-03-2003, 08:44 PM
That would be an interesting concept... Fresh, cooked on the vine, tomatoes
!
--
Anna Merchant
http://www.thecotfactory.co.nz
If electricity comes from electrons, does that mean that morality comes from
morons?
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