Upside down tomatos
SteveB wrote:
I have seen on TV these upside down tomato containers. They look like, and probably are simple bags that let you grow tomatos in a hanging position upside down. I have raised tomatos in Louisiana for about six years, so am familiar with a lot of the basics. I now live in Utah, and although it is quite a different climate here, some of the basics apply. Has anyone ever tried these? Do they work? Could one build some of the same thing out of say, burlap bags, as I believe they would probably last only one season anyway? Or just grow them the right way? Steve Made out of what looks to be 2 or 3 litter pop bottles. http://www.flickr.com/photos/program...n/photostream/ Made out of buckets http://www.dailyherald.com/special/g...den/tomato.asp Using those hanging baskets http://picasaweb.google.com/mrsnierh...97960128460578 Anyway, I think burlap would work but you might want to line the inside with plastic before you build your dirt sack, that way it would cut back on watering. I'd actually always wanted to try that.. I've got a few buckets on hand.. Maybe I'll whip up one and play a bit.. ;) |
Upside down tomatos
I have seen on TV these upside down tomato containers. They look like, and
probably are simple bags that let you grow tomatos in a hanging position upside down. I have raised tomatos in Louisiana for about six years, so am familiar with a lot of the basics. I now live in Utah, and although it is quite a different climate here, some of the basics apply. Has anyone ever tried these? Do they work? Could one build some of the same thing out of say, burlap bags, as I believe they would probably last only one season anyway? Or just grow them the right way? Steve |
Upside down tomatos
"SteveB" meagain@rockvilleUSA wrote in message ... I have seen on TV these upside down tomato containers. They look like, and probably are simple bags that let you grow tomatos in a hanging position upside down. I have raised tomatos in Louisiana for about six years, so am familiar with a lot of the basics. I now live in Utah, and although it is quite a different climate here, some of the basics apply. Has anyone ever tried these? Do they work? Could one build some of the same thing out of say, burlap bags, as I believe they would probably last only one season anyway? Or just grow them the right way? Steve I saw these things at last week's garden show. They are reinforced plastic bags. So why do you want to use them, just want to dink around with something new, growing area restraints, want to be the first in your neighborhood or have you never been able to grow a decent tomato plant and are desperate to try anything? Val Val |
Upside down tomatos
"Scott Hildenbrand" wrote in message ... Made out of what looks to be 2 or 3 litter pop bottles. http://www.flickr.com/photos/program...n/photostream/ Those poor plants just don't look happy. Probably not going to be enough soil to keep the plants going in the long haul. I'd think that the clear plastic would cook the roots when the sun is in full on summer mode. Made out of buckets http://www.dailyherald.com/special/g...den/tomato.asp The guy across the street has two 5 gallon white buckets hanging on his balcony he grows tomatoes in. They always seem to do pretty well. He grows herbs in the top of the buckets. Using those hanging baskets http://picasaweb.google.com/mrsnierh...sting....still looks weird, I like the lobelia better ;)Val |
Upside down tomatos
SteveB wrote:
I have seen on TV these upside down tomato containers. They look like, and probably are simple bags that let you grow tomatos in a hanging position upside down. I have raised tomatos in Louisiana for about six years, so am familiar with a lot of the basics. I now live in Utah, and although it is quite a different climate here, some of the basics apply. Has anyone ever tried these? Do they work? Could one build some of the same thing out of say, burlap bags, as I believe they would probably last only one season anyway? Or just grow them the right way? Steve Steve, The ones that they sell are EXTREMELY overpriced (usually about $10 per bag). If you want to try to grow upside down tomatoes you can make your own up side down containers. One year I took some three liter soft drink bottles and cut off the bottoms, poked some hole near the bottom, used some twine for hangers and planted a tomato plant in each one. The ones that did the best were the smaller type plants (determinate). They were all hung in a nice sunny area of the garden and all produced a good crop. Comparing them to the same type of plant that were grown in the ground the only advantage that I saw was that the upside down ones produced tomatoes a few days earlier than the "in ground" tomatoes. The BIG disadvantage that I found was that the 3 liter containers had to be watered daily (if it didn't rain). I might give them a try again this year because the grand kids seen them on TV and expressed an interest in trying them. I've been looking around for a cheap alternative to the bags that they sell but I think three liter bottles are as cheap as you can get. -- Bill R. (Ohio Valley, U.S.A) Gardening for over 40 years To see pictures from my garden visit http://members.iglou.com/brosen Digital Camera - Pentax *ist DL Remove NO_WEEDS_ in e-mail address to reply by e-mail |
Upside down tomatos
Val wrote:
"Scott Hildenbrand" wrote in message ... Made out of what looks to be 2 or 3 litter pop bottles. http://www.flickr.com/photos/program...n/photostream/ Those poor plants just don't look happy. Probably not going to be enough soil to keep the plants going in the long haul. I'd think that the clear plastic would cook the roots when the sun is in full on summer mode. Made out of buckets http://www.dailyherald.com/special/g...den/tomato.asp The guy across the street has two 5 gallon white buckets hanging on his balcony he grows tomatoes in. They always seem to do pretty well. He grows herbs in the top of the buckets. Using those hanging baskets http://picasaweb.google.com/mrsnierh...sting....still looks weird, I like the lobelia better ;)Val Yeah.. I think the best DIY bet would be those 5 gallon buckets.. I had several I cleaned and kept when I sealed the driveway at the old house. Seems like the bigger the container the better the plants do, which is no surprise. |
Upside down tomatos
"Val" wrote in message ... "SteveB" meagain@rockvilleUSA wrote in message ... I have seen on TV these upside down tomato containers. They look like, and probably are simple bags that let you grow tomatos in a hanging position upside down. I have raised tomatos in Louisiana for about six years, so am familiar with a lot of the basics. I now live in Utah, and although it is quite a different climate here, some of the basics apply. Has anyone ever tried these? Do they work? Could one build some of the same thing out of say, burlap bags, as I believe they would probably last only one season anyway? Or just grow them the right way? Steve I saw these things at last week's garden show. They are reinforced plastic bags. So why do you want to use them, just want to dink around with something new, growing area restraints, want to be the first in your neighborhood or have you never been able to grow a decent tomato plant and are desperate to try anything? Val Val Huh? Please reread my post when you are sober. Steve |
Upside down tomatos
On Tue, 26 Feb 2008 09:34:02 -0800, "Val"
wrote: I saw these things at last week's garden show. They are reinforced plastic bags. So why do you want to use them, just want to dink around with something new, growing area restraints, want to be the first in your neighborhood or have you never been able to grow a decent tomato plant and are desperate to try anything? Because we can. Penelope -- You have proven yourself to be the most malicious, classless person that I've encountered in years. - "pointed" |
Upside down tomatos
On Tue, 26 Feb 2008 09:31:40 -0800, "SteveB"
meagain@rockvilleUSA wrote: Has anyone ever tried these? Do they work? Could one build some of the same thing out of say, burlap bags, as I believe they would probably last only one season anyway? I got some on sale for Christmas gifts, and kept one. The plastic is heavy, and I think it will last more than one season. I'm going to try a couple of 5 gallon buckets, too. I thought I'd put tomatoes in the bottom and and a chile pepper and cilantro in the top and have little salsa gardens dotted about the yard. I even thought about buying one of those hard plastic hanging flower pots that have openings on the sides and bottom, and putting some smallish, bushy pepper plants like a Criolla Sella in there. They're kinda expensive, and the root space would be pretty limited, so I probably won't. It would look pretty cool, though. Or just grow them the right way? That, too. Penelope -- You have proven yourself to be the most malicious, classless person that I've encountered in years. - "pointed" |
Upside down tomatos
"Jangchub" wrote in message ... On Tue, 26 Feb 2008 13:18:12 -0500, Bill R wrote: SteveB wrote: I have seen on TV these upside down tomato containers. They look like, and probably are simple bags that let you grow tomatos in a hanging position upside down. I have raised tomatos in Louisiana for about six years, so am familiar with a lot of the basics. I now live in Utah, and although it is quite a different climate here, some of the basics apply. Has anyone ever tried these? Do they work? Could one build some of the same thing out of say, burlap bags, as I believe they would probably last only one season anyway? Or just grow them the right way? Steve Steve, The ones that they sell are EXTREMELY overpriced (usually about $10 per bag). If you want to try to grow upside down tomatoes you can make your own up side down containers. One year I took some three liter soft drink bottles and cut off the bottoms, poked some hole near the bottom, used some twine for hangers and planted a tomato plant in each one. The ones that did the best were the smaller type plants (determinate). They were all hung in a nice sunny area of the garden and all produced a good crop. Comparing them to the same type of plant that were grown in the ground the only advantage that I saw was that the upside down ones produced tomatoes a few days earlier than the "in ground" tomatoes. The BIG disadvantage that I found was that the 3 liter containers had to be watered daily (if it didn't rain). I might give them a try again this year because the grand kids seen them on TV and expressed an interest in trying them. I've been looking around for a cheap alternative to the bags that they sell but I think three liter bottles are as cheap as you can get. If you have five gallon buckets, poke holes all along the bottom and sides and hang those upside down with the tomato plants in them. Just saw the ad and was curious. I think I'll just wait until the local nursery starts selling them, then grow them in the customary way, and do what I did before. Nothing like fresh tomatos. Steve |
Upside down tomatos
On Feb 26, 9:16 pm, "SteveB" meagain@rockvilleUSA wrote:
"Jangchub" wrote in message ... On Tue, 26 Feb 2008 13:18:12 -0500, Bill R wrote: SteveB wrote: I have seen on TV these upside down tomato containers. They look like, and probably are simple bags that let you grow tomatos in a hanging position upside down. I have raised tomatos in Louisiana for about six years, so am familiar with a lot of the basics. I now live in Utah, and although it is quite a different climate here, some of the basics apply. Has anyone ever tried these? Do they work? Could one build some of the same thing out of say, burlap bags, as I believe they would probably last only one season anyway? Or just grow them the right way? Steve Steve, The ones that they sell are EXTREMELY overpriced (usually about $10 per bag). If you want to try to grow upside down tomatoes you can make your own up side down containers. One year I took some three liter soft drink bottles and cut off the bottoms, poked some hole near the bottom, used some twine for hangers and planted a tomato plant in each one. The ones that did the best were the smaller type plants (determinate). They were all hung in a nice sunny area of the garden and all produced a good crop. Comparing them to the same type of plant that were grown in the ground the only advantage that I saw was that the upside down ones produced tomatoes a few days earlier than the "in ground" tomatoes. The BIG disadvantage that I found was that the 3 liter containers had to be watered daily (if it didn't rain). I might give them a try again this year because the grand kids seen them on TV and expressed an interest in trying them. I've been looking around for a cheap alternative to the bags that they sell but I think three liter bottles are as cheap as you can get. If you have five gallon buckets, poke holes all along the bottom and sides and hang those upside down with the tomato plants in them. Just saw the ad and was curious. I think I'll just wait until the local nursery starts selling them, then grow them in the customary way, and do what I did before. Nothing like fresh tomatos. Steve The only thought I had about this was that some of the tomatoe plants get mildewed or moldy or spotty leaves and start dropping them from getting water on the leaves. Any overwatering would go right to the foliage and could promote what ever that is. It would be so much easier to pick them with them higher and with less foliage though, that I've wanted to try it. Our Amish farmer friends place the plants between two fences about a foot apart and let them 'climb' between them. They remove some of the foliage and have less reason to water. The plants produce voluminously, and are easy to see and get to. Trying to get DH to put up the fences this year. Olde Hippee |
Upside down tomatos
On Feb 26, 12:46*pm, "Val" wrote:
"Scott Hildenbrand" wrote in message ... Made out of what looks to be 2 or 3 litter pop bottles. http://www.flickr.com/photos/program...n/photostream/ Those poor plants just don't look happy. Probably not going to be enough soil to keep the plants going in the long haul. I'd think that the clear plastic would cook the roots when the sun is in full on summer mode. Made out of buckets http://www.dailyherald.com/special/g...den/tomato.asp The guy across the street has two 5 gallon white buckets hanging on his balcony he grows tomatoes in. They always seem to do pretty well. He grows herbs in the top of the buckets. Using those hanging baskets *http://picasaweb.google.com/mrsnierh...51057....looks weird, I like the lobelia better ;)Val yeah, i agree; you're going to want way more dirt for optimum results. the other part of the idea, hanging the tomatoes instead of leaving them to sprawl is good, except that it's just as easy to tie them to a trellis or something and grow up. if i had a nice sunny hot patch of garden, i'd grow the tomatoes there; if not, then in a larger bucket or garbage can full of dirt in a sunny hot spot. that said, maybe i'll try one of those hangy things, just to see. i suppose one advantage is that you'd be protected from that bacterial diseas that's in all the soil hereabouts. |
Upside down tomatos
On Feb 26, 6:40*pm, Jangchub wrote:
On Tue, 26 Feb 2008 13:18:12 -0500, Bill R wrote: SteveB wrote: I have seen on TV these upside down tomato containers. *They look like, and probably are simple bags that let you grow tomatos in a hanging position upside down. I have raised tomatos in Louisiana for about six years, so am familiar with a lot of the basics. *I now live in Utah, and although it is quite a different climate here, some of the basics apply. Has anyone ever tried these? *Do they work? *Could one build some of the same thing out of say, burlap bags, as I believe they would probably last only one season anyway? Or just grow them the right way? Steve Steve, The ones that they sell are EXTREMELY overpriced (usually about $10 per bag). *If you want to try to grow upside down tomatoes you can make your own up side down containers. *One year I took some three liter soft drink bottles and cut off the bottoms, poked some hole near the bottom, used some twine for hangers and planted a tomato plant in each one. *The ones that did the best were the smaller type plants (determinate). *They were all hung in a nice sunny area of the garden and all produced a good crop. *Comparing them to the same type of plant that were grown in the ground the only advantage that I saw was that the upside down ones produced tomatoes a few days earlier than the "in ground" tomatoes. *The BIG disadvantage that I found was that the 3 liter containers had to be watered daily (if it didn't rain). I might give them a try again this year because the grand kids seen them on TV and expressed an interest in trying them. *I've been looking around for a cheap alternative to the bags that they sell but I think three liter bottles are as cheap as you can get. If you have five gallon buckets, poke holes all along the bottom and sides and hang those upside down with the tomato plants in them.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Might just plant the tomatoes regular side up, and just stand on my head when i garden them. |
Upside down tomatos
No one has mentioned Harbor Freight yet.
http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/cta...emnumber=92235 $14.95 not available in their store "SteveB" meagain@rockvilleUSA wrote in message ... I have seen on TV these upside down tomato containers. They look like, and probably are simple bags that let you grow tomatos in a hanging position upside down. I have raised tomatos in Louisiana for about six years, so am familiar with a lot of the basics. I now live in Utah, and although it is quite a different climate here, some of the basics apply. Has anyone ever tried these? Do they work? Could one build some of the same thing out of say, burlap bags, as I believe they would probably last only one season anyway? Or just grow them the right way? Steve |
Upside down tomatos
In article
, z wrote: On Feb 26, 12:46*pm, "Val" wrote: "Scott Hildenbrand" wrote in message ... Made out of what looks to be 2 or 3 litter pop bottles. http://www.flickr.com/photos/program...n/photostream/ Those poor plants just don't look happy. Probably not going to be enough soil to keep the plants going in the long haul. I'd think that the clear plastic would cook the roots when the sun is in full on summer mode. Made out of buckets http://www.dailyherald.com/special/g...den/tomato.asp The guy across the street has two 5 gallon white buckets hanging on his balcony he grows tomatoes in. They always seem to do pretty well. He grows herbs in the top of the buckets. Using those hanging baskets *http://picasaweb.google.com/mrsnierh...to#51057...loo ks weird, I like the lobelia better ;)Val yeah, i agree; you're going to want way more dirt for optimum results. the other part of the idea, hanging the tomatoes instead of leaving them to sprawl is good, except that it's just as easy to tie them to a trellis or something and grow up. if i had a nice sunny hot patch of garden, i'd grow the tomatoes there; if not, then in a larger bucket or garbage can full of dirt in a sunny hot spot. that said, maybe i'll try one of those hangy things, just to see. i suppose one advantage is that you'd be protected from that bacterial diseas that's in all the soil hereabouts. I'm curious. As someone else mentioned, gardeners are normally cautioned not to wet the leaves of the tomato plants. How do you avoid that, when they are upside down? -- Billy Impeach Pelosi, Bush & Cheney to the Hague http://rachelcorriefoundation.org/site/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Movemen...George_W._Bush |
Upside down tomatos
On Feb 28, 12:07 pm, z wrote:
On Feb 26, 6:40 pm, Jangchub wrote: On Tue, 26 Feb 2008 13:18:12 -0500, Bill R wrote: SteveB wrote: I have seen on TV these upside down tomato containers. They look like, and probably are simple bags that let you grow tomatos in a hanging position upside down. I have raised tomatos in Louisiana for about six years, so am familiar with a lot of the basics. I now live in Utah, and although it is quite a different climate here, some of the basics apply. Has anyone ever tried these? Do they work? Could one build some of the same thing out of say, burlap bags, as I believe they would probably last only one season anyway? Or just grow them the right way? Steve Steve, The ones that they sell are EXTREMELY overpriced (usually about $10 per bag). If you want to try to grow upside down tomatoes you can make your own up side down containers. One year I took some three liter soft drink bottles and cut off the bottoms, poked some hole near the bottom, used some twine for hangers and planted a tomato plant in each one. The ones that did the best were the smaller type plants (determinate). They were all hung in a nice sunny area of the garden and all produced a good crop. Comparing them to the same type of plant that were grown in the ground the only advantage that I saw was that the upside down ones produced tomatoes a few days earlier than the "in ground" tomatoes. The BIG disadvantage that I found was that the 3 liter containers had to be watered daily (if it didn't rain). I might give them a try again this year because the grand kids seen them on TV and expressed an interest in trying them. I've been looking around for a cheap alternative to the bags that they sell but I think three liter bottles are as cheap as you can get. If you have five gallon buckets, poke holes all along the bottom and sides and hang those upside down with the tomato plants in them.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Might just plant the tomatoes regular side up, and just stand on my head when i garden them. LOL this is the best comment of the day! Emilie Nor Cal 76 deg F. today !! |
Upside down tomatos
In article ,
Rick wrote: On Thu, 28 Feb 2008 13:15:58 -0800, Billy wrote: In article , z wrote: On Feb 26, 12:46*pm, "Val" wrote: "Scott Hildenbrand" wrote in message ... Made out of what looks to be 2 or 3 litter pop bottles. http://www.flickr.com/photos/program...n/photostream/ Those poor plants just don't look happy. Probably not going to be enough soil to keep the plants going in the long haul. I'd think that the clear plastic would cook the roots when the sun is in full on summer mode. Made out of buckets http://www.dailyherald.com/special/g...den/tomato.asp The guy across the street has two 5 gallon white buckets hanging on his balcony he grows tomatoes in. They always seem to do pretty well. He grows herbs in the top of the buckets. Using those hanging baskets *http://picasaweb.google.com/mrsnierh...ns/photo#51057... loo ks weird, I like the lobelia better ;)Val yeah, i agree; you're going to want way more dirt for optimum results. the other part of the idea, hanging the tomatoes instead of leaving them to sprawl is good, except that it's just as easy to tie them to a trellis or something and grow up. if i had a nice sunny hot patch of garden, i'd grow the tomatoes there; if not, then in a larger bucket or garbage can full of dirt in a sunny hot spot. that said, maybe i'll try one of those hangy things, just to see. i suppose one advantage is that you'd be protected from that bacterial diseas that's in all the soil hereabouts. I'm curious. As someone else mentioned, gardeners are normally cautioned not to wet the leaves of the tomato plants. How do you avoid that, when they are upside down? I have been growing tomatoes "upside down" for the last 4 years. I also grow them in containers and in the ground. I use 5 gal buckets, and use a slab of foam rubber in the bottom where the hole is to retain dirt and help retain water. I only fill the buckets about half with soil (2 gal or so)and that seems to be fine. I do find that I have to water the tomatoes frequently if it is hot and dry. Water just streams down the plants, but they are up in the breeze and dry rapidly. I find the smaller varieties do better, and grow cherry, and Julian types, but have had good success with moderate sized tomatoes. Most years the buckets out perform the other plants, and for the last 3 years I have had tomatoes ripening right up until the second or 3rd hard freeze (I just throw a sheet over the plant which are hanging on the deck rail 1 story above ground). My container and ground tomatoes succumb to fungus or bacterial blights several weeks to a month or so earlier. Thanks for the empirical information;-) -- Billy Impeach Pelosi, Bush & Cheney to the Hague http://rachelcorriefoundation.org/site/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Movemen...George_W._Bush |
Upside down tomatos
In article ,
Scott Hildenbrand wrote: Using those hanging baskets http://picasaweb.google.com/mrsnierh...51057979601284 60578 Hm. I've got one of those out front that I've never used for anything. Might be worth a try. :-) Wonder if I can try it with a pre-grown bedding plant? I've always just bought bedding tomatoes. Never tried them from seeds... -- Peace, Om Remove underscore to validate gmails. "Politics is supposed to be the second oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first." -- Mark Twain |
Upside down tomatos
In article ,
"SteveB" meagain@rockvilleUSA wrote: I saw these things at last week's garden show. They are reinforced plastic bags. So why do you want to use them, just want to dink around with something new, growing area restraints, want to be the first in your neighborhood or have you never been able to grow a decent tomato plant and are desperate to try anything? Val Val Huh? Please reread my post when you are sober. Steve lol! -- Peace, Om Remove underscore to validate gmails. "Politics is supposed to be the second oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first." -- Mark Twain |
Upside down tomatos
In article ,
Scott Hildenbrand wrote: Yeah.. I think the best DIY bet would be those 5 gallon buckets.. I had several I cleaned and kept when I sealed the driveway at the old house. Seems like the bigger the container the better the plants do, which is no surprise. Does anyone have any experience growing these? I'd just planned on container gardening this year to save on water costs, (water costs make it cheaper to buy at the store rather than garden anymore! At least here...) but if one gets a better yield from these, I may try it. -- Peace, Om Remove underscore to validate gmails. "Politics is supposed to be the second oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first." -- Mark Twain |
Upside down tomatos
I tried them, when I got tired of my hanging baskets of strawberries.
I tried 2 kinds of tomatoes, Early Girl and one other which I've forgotten. We don't have a good tomato climate--too cool. They did about the same as plants in the ground, a little smaller. BUT on one kind (and, I'm sorry, I don't remember which) almost every fruit rotted before it ripened because of water dripping on it; watering was from a tiny sprinkler stuck in the top of the hanging container. We used small plants from the nursery, in potting soil with a time release fertilizer. As soon as they started growing they realized they were upside down, and turned up. Eventually the weight of it all pulled them down, but it was not graceful. Same thing with the petunias I tried in them the following year. The whole setup was interesting, but unattractive. -- Visit www.insectgraphics.com for all your insect gift needs "Omelet" wrote in message ... In article , Scott Hildenbrand wrote: Yeah.. I think the best DIY bet would be those 5 gallon buckets.. I had several I cleaned and kept when I sealed the driveway at the old house. Seems like the bigger the container the better the plants do, which is no surprise. Does anyone have any experience growing these? I'd just planned on container gardening this year to save on water costs, (water costs make it cheaper to buy at the store rather than garden anymore! At least here...) but if one gets a better yield from these, I may try it. -- Peace, Om Remove underscore to validate gmails. "Politics is supposed to be the second oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first." -- Mark Twain |
Upside down tomatos
In article ,
"tuckermor" wrote: I tried them, when I got tired of my hanging baskets of strawberries. I tried 2 kinds of tomatoes, Early Girl and one other which I've forgotten. We don't have a good tomato climate--too cool. They did about the same as plants in the ground, a little smaller. BUT on one kind (and, I'm sorry, I don't remember which) almost every fruit rotted before it ripened because of water dripping on it; watering was from a tiny sprinkler stuck in the top of the hanging container. We used small plants from the nursery, in potting soil with a time release fertilizer. As soon as they started growing they realized they were upside down, and turned up. Eventually the weight of it all pulled them down, but it was not graceful. Same thing with the petunias I tried in them the following year. The whole setup was interesting, but unattractive. -- My problem would be having someplace to hang them. g I'm thinking of topping the soil with sphagnum to also cut back on watering. -- Peace, Om Remove underscore to validate gmails. "Politics is supposed to be the second oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first." -- Mark Twain |
Upside down tomatos
I just remembered--we once tried them with cucumbers. They did pretty well,
but just grew straight down. Once again, not very attractive, but lots of cukes. -- Visit www.insectgraphics.com for all your insect gift needs "Omelet" wrote in message ... In article , "tuckermor" wrote: I tried them, when I got tired of my hanging baskets of strawberries. I tried 2 kinds of tomatoes, Early Girl and one other which I've forgotten. We don't have a good tomato climate--too cool. They did about the same as plants in the ground, a little smaller. BUT on one kind (and, I'm sorry, I don't remember which) almost every fruit rotted before it ripened because of water dripping on it; watering was from a tiny sprinkler stuck in the top of the hanging container. We used small plants from the nursery, in potting soil with a time release fertilizer. As soon as they started growing they realized they were upside down, and turned up. Eventually the weight of it all pulled them down, but it was not graceful. Same thing with the petunias I tried in them the following year. The whole setup was interesting, but unattractive. -- My problem would be having someplace to hang them. g I'm thinking of topping the soil with sphagnum to also cut back on watering. -- Peace, Om Remove underscore to validate gmails. "Politics is supposed to be the second oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first." -- Mark Twain |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:14 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter