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Old 03-04-2005, 12:32 PM
Noodle Doo
 
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When growing tomatoes from seed the knack is to stop them from stretching &
keep them as short jointed as possible - you have not mentioned how many
true leaves are on your plants, I am hoping that that are not just on their
seed leaves and are 4 to 5 inches tall.
Even so, all is not lost if the plants are stretched as you can always plant
them well down as roots will develop from the stem.
In fact this is worth doing when they go out into their final position -
when I have had stretched plants I have planted them out so that even the
seed leaves & the first true leaf joint is below the surface (remove these
leaves first).
Most plants will wilt a bit when re-potted - provided they are watered (not
overwatered) and kept slightly shaded for the first day or so they should
recover.

S

"Hel" wrote in message
news
Hi all

I've got several young tomato plants (Moneymaker) which were growing
indoors, 4-5 per pot until yesterday when, because most of them were 4-6
inches high, I decided to move them to individual pots.

However, this morning, I found them all to have wilted to some degree -
before potting, they were very healthy little plants. The soil is
definitely damp enough, I'm worried I've done something wrong with the
rooting systems. Each plant was pulled very gently from its surrounding
soil, and came up with about a cubic inch of soil/root. This didn't seem
like much but I have no idea what tomato roots are supposed to look like.

I'm quite new to growing plants from seed - have I done something wrong
here, and is there anything I can do to save my tomatoes? Any help
appreciated!

Helen

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