GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   Edible Gardening (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/edible-gardening/)
-   -   black bottoms on tomatos (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/edible-gardening/36766-black-bottoms-tomatos.html)

Mary Beal 16-07-2003 04:04 AM

black bottoms on tomatos
 
This is the 2d year my tomatos have dark spots (big) on the underside.
Someone told me I water too much. Someone else told me I water too little!
I am not convinced it is the watering. Maybe something in the water? We
have a well.

Would appreciate anyone who knows weighing in.

Mary



Bobbett 16-07-2003 06:11 AM

black bottoms on tomatos
 
Mary Beal wrote:

This is the 2d year my tomatos have dark spots (big) on the underside.
Someone told me I water too much. Someone else told me I water too little!
I am not convinced it is the watering.


If always been told it has to do with calcium absorption and/or
magnesium in the soil. HOWEVER, I'm not an 'additive' person and the
first year I started mulching well around the plants, ALL the blossom
end rot stopped, and I haven't had it since.

I use no chemicals on my plants nor on my lawn. I mow my lawn and then
put the lawn clippings thickly (6" or so) around the base of all the
tomato plants, leaving a few inches around the main stem so the grass
doesn't touch it. This type of mulching, btw, will also keep the
moisture even in and around the plant, so it'll help if any of the
blossom end rot issues are from water absorption or lack thereof.

hth, Bobbett



zxcvbob 16-07-2003 07:26 AM

black bottoms on tomatos
 
Mary Beal wrote:

This is the 2d year my tomatos have dark spots (big) on the underside.
Someone told me I water too much. Someone else told me I water too little!
I am not convinced it is the watering. Maybe something in the water? We
have a well.

Would appreciate anyone who knows weighing in.

Mary


It is caused by a calcium deficiency in the fruits. Indirectly it is
caused by moisture stress that can make whatever calcium is available
accumulate in the leaves and not the fruit.

Maintaining uniformly adequate soil moisture is the key. Adding a little
calcium chloride or calcium nitrate to the soil couldn't hurt. You can buy
a calcium chloride product called "Stop Rot" that says to apply foliarly.
It works a lot better to water the the roots with it. Adding a little
epsom salt to supply magnesium might also help the plants use their calcium
more efficiently.

Best regards,
Bob


simy1 17-07-2003 01:42 AM

black bottoms on tomatos
 
"Mary Beal" wrote in message arthlink.net...
This is the 2d year my tomatos have dark spots (big) on the underside.
Someone told me I water too much. Someone else told me I water too little!
I am not convinced it is the watering. Maybe something in the water? We
have a well.

Would appreciate anyone who knows weighing in.

Mary


Next year, sprinkle a handful of wood ash per plant a month or two
ahead of time. It will not only prevent BER, it will also improve the
flavor of the tomatoes (if you have acid soil, which you probably
have).

Bill Bolle 17-07-2003 11:52 PM

black bottoms on tomatos
 
Mary Beal wrote:
This is the 2d year my tomatos have dark spots (big) on the underside.
Someone told me I water too much. Someone else told me I water too little!
I am not convinced it is the watering. Maybe something in the water? We
have a well.

Would appreciate anyone who knows weighing in.

Mary


Do a "Google" search for "blossom end rot". That's what you've got.

Bill


Jim Carter 17-07-2003 11:52 PM

black bottoms on tomatos
 
On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 23:00:56 GMT, "Mary Beal"
wrote in rec.gardens.edible:

This is the 2d year my tomatos have dark spots (big) on the underside.
Someone told me I water too much. Someone else told me I water too little!
I am not convinced it is the watering. Maybe something in the water? We
have a well.

Would appreciate anyone who knows weighing in.

Mary

BER (Blossom End Rot). Caused by a lack of calcium in the fruit. This can
occur in the presence of too much water even though there is plenty of calcium
in the soil and leaves.
--
Gardening Zones
Canada Zone 5a
United States Zone 3a
Near Ottawa, Ontario

Mike Stevenson 19-07-2003 06:22 PM

black bottoms on tomatos
 
Do be careful with that wood ash. It can drastically alter Ph if too much is
applied. A handful is not likely to do too much harm but if your soil in
that local area is already unbalanced Ph wise it can disrupt it further.

"simy1" wrote in message
om...
"Mary Beal" wrote in message

arthlink.net...
This is the 2d year my tomatos have dark spots (big) on the underside.
Someone told me I water too much. Someone else told me I water too

little!
I am not convinced it is the watering. Maybe something in the water?

We
have a well.

Would appreciate anyone who knows weighing in.

Mary


Next year, sprinkle a handful of wood ash per plant a month or two
ahead of time. It will not only prevent BER, it will also improve the
flavor of the tomatoes (if you have acid soil, which you probably
have).




TCS 20-07-2003 09:14 PM

black bottoms on tomatos
 
htmlinput type crash/html
begin On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 23:00:56 GMT, Mary Beal wrote:
This is the 2d year my tomatos have dark spots (big) on the underside.
Someone told me I water too much. Someone else told me I water too little!
I am not convinced it is the watering. Maybe something in the water? We
have a well.


Do a search on google for "tomato blossom end rot"


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:22 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter