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Zphysics1 02-03-2003 03:03 AM

red and green plastic
 
These platic 'mulches' are supposed to be used around tomatoes and green
veggies. Has anyone used them? Any comments?

/z.

Marcella Tracy Peek 02-03-2003 05:15 AM

red and green plastic
 
In article ,
(Zphysics1) wrote:

These platic 'mulches' are supposed to be used around tomatoes and green
veggies. Has anyone used them? Any comments?

/z.


I tried the red plastic last year.

I live near San Francisco so deal with cool foggy summers and figured
things couldn't be worse than the previous year. I grow tomatoes in
large pots on my deck as this is the only place safe from the deer. I
do choose short season varieties.

Frankly, I didn't see a huge difference in yield from previous years. I
did give some to my dad and tried to convince him to plant half the
tomatoes with the plastic and half without. It didn't happen. Maybe
this year I'll go over and help him plant so we will have a better idea
if the plastic makes much difference.

marcella

Frankhartx 02-03-2003 08:28 AM

red and green plastic
 
From: (Zphysics1)

These platic 'mulches' are supposed to be used around tomatoes and green
veggies. Has anyone used them? Any comments?


I usually use black plastic mulch for most plantings--tried some plants with
the red mulch--no discernable difference was observed.

Zphysics1 02-03-2003 11:39 PM

red and green plastic
 

From: (Zphysics1)


These plastic 'mulches' are supposed to be used around tomatoes and green
veggies. Has anyone used them? Any comments?


I usually use black plastic mulch for most plantings--tried some plants with
the red mulch--no discernable difference was observed.




You mean I spent all that money for nothin'?
Jeez.

/z.


Lorenzo L. Love 03-03-2003 12:03 AM

red and green plastic
 
Zphysics1 wrote:


From: (Zphysics1)


These plastic 'mulches' are supposed to be used around tomatoes and green
veggies. Has anyone used them? Any comments?


I usually use black plastic mulch for most plantings--tried some plants with
the red mulch--no discernable difference was observed.



You mean I spent all that money for nothin'?
Jeez.

/z.


It probably depends on how your tomatoes are planted. I believe the
tests that showned improvements in tomato yield with red plastic mulch
was done on commercial farms with widely spaced rows planted so power
equipment can travel the field. That allows lots of light in to be
reflected up from the mulch. I know my home garden tomato patch was too
small and too densely planted to allow much light down to the ground so
the red mulch didn't do anything for me. It may work fine in bigger
scale plantings.

Lorenzo L. Love
http://home.thegrid.net/~lllove

"We recognize, however dimly, that greater efficiency, ease, and
security may come at a substantial price in freedom, that law and order
can be a doublethink version of oppression, that individual liberties
surrendered for whatever good reason are freedom lost."
Walter Cronkite, in the preface to the 1984 edition of 1984

Frankhartx 03-03-2003 08:51 AM

red and green plastic
 
From: (Zphysics1)

I usually use black plastic mulch for most plantings--tried some plants with
the red mulch--no discernable difference was observed.


You mean I spent all that money for nothin'?
Jeez.


You were had.


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