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Roleft 08-06-2004 04:28 PM

tomato plants failing
 
I have two potted tomato plants that were thriving, but now are failing. One is
a cherry tomato plant that was yielding LOTS of beautiful and tasty fruit.
After the first large batch, the leaves started turning brown and yellow and
there has been NO more new growth in several weeks...not leaves or blossoms. I
have fertilized and both are planted in a potting mix.

The second is a "patio" tomato plant that has only grown about 1 tomatoe out of
each bunch of blossoms. The growing tomatoes look fine, but are taking FOREVER
to turn red. The other blossoms either yielded fruit that failed to ever grow
or no fruit at all. The plant itself looks fairly healthy except that it has
also had NO new growth (leaves or blossoms) for several weeks.

We have had LOTS of rain in the past few weeks (I live in SE Kentucky) and am
wondering if root rot could be a problem. If so, can this be resolved?

thanks for any help,


Pat Kiewicz 08-06-2004 04:28 PM

tomato plants failing
 
Roleft said:

I have two potted tomato plants that were thriving, but now are failing. One is
a cherry tomato plant that was yielding LOTS of beautiful and tasty fruit.
After the first large batch, the leaves started turning brown and yellow and
there has been NO more new growth in several weeks...not leaves or blossoms. I
have fertilized and both are planted in a potting mix.


What size pot? Your plants may be completely root-bound.

In my experience, the most fertilizer for potted plants is Osmocote (or a
similar 'off-brand' product). It's an encapsulated, slow-release fertilizer
that can't be easily leached out of the pot.

snip
We have had LOTS of rain in the past few weeks (I live in SE Kentucky) and am
wondering if root rot could be a problem. If so, can this be resolved?


Drill some holes in the base of the pot (if there aren't any there right now).
I've never had to worry about potted plants get overwatered before -- usually,
the opposite is the problem. (Last month's record rainfall only meant that
I didn't water the couple of potted plants that were out there at all.)

--
Pat in Plymouth MI ('someplace.net' is comcast)

Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
(attributed to Don Marti)


simy1 08-06-2004 04:29 PM

tomato plants failing
 
(Pat Kiewicz) wrote in message ...

Drill some holes in the base of the pot (if there aren't any there right now).
I've never had to worry about potted plants get overwatered before -- usually,
the opposite is the problem. (Last month's record rainfall only meant that
I didn't water the couple of potted plants that were out there at all.)


Mulch works with potted plants as well, Pat. I give them as many wood
chips as can fit on the pot (or compost, or manure).

simy1 09-06-2004 03:05 PM

tomato plants failing
 
(Pat Kiewicz) wrote in message ...
simy1 said:

Mulch isn't enough for a large, heavily planted pot in August. It just isn't.
I end up watering the pots nearly every day. And these are pots that are


Let's say it cuts down watering by 33% depending on the plant. Shiny
leaved plants fare better than, say, peace lily. It is not as good as
mulch on soil, yes, but I leave my houseplants outside while on the
road for a week at a time. Necessity is the mother of experimentation.


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