Posts Tagged ‘Tomato Planter’

Upside Down Tomato Plants: DIY

December 6th, 2009

Farmers discovered years ago that tomatoes can grow really well if you plant them upside down. Today, there are plenty of good upside down planters on the market. The only problem is that they can be expensive. But, you can easily make an upside down tomato planter yourself.

First, you need a good sturdy bucket for each plant. You will need to grow your plant to at least four inches tall before you begin. We’ve used everything from one gallon ice cream buckets to five gallon paint buckets. The main thing your bucket needs is a good handle.

A lid is also preferable, but not really necessary. Cut a hole in the bottom of the bucket. Make it only an inch or two across, you don’t want your plant to fall out. Put some potting soil in the bucket, catching what falls out for future use. Gently position your tomato plant in the hole so that the roots are inside the bucket and the stems are sticking out of the bottom.

You may enlist some help for this step unless you already have somewhere to hang your bucket where you can still reach inside. Gently fill dirt little by little around the roots. Do not pack it tight. Wrap a strip of newspaper around the stem so that it is half-way in the dirt and half-way out. This keeps bugs that may climb around the bucket from climbing down the tomato plant. This trick also works for tomatoes planted in the ground.

Finish filling the bucket with dirt because upside down tomato plants can grow a lot of roots. Because gravity is pulling down on the plant, it will grow thick sturdy stalks that may curve up into the air. They will sprout more stems per stalk than a normal tomato plant and support a lot more weight. Hang your bucket somewhere that gets a lot of sun.

If you use a lid, cut a hole in it big enough for rain to enter. Your upside down tomato plant will not need as much water as one planted in the ground because it’s soil will not drain much. Tomatoes never touch the ground and can get sun all the way around. This helps them to ripen sooner and more evenly than traditional plants. The gravity and additional circulation also helps the tomato plant produce more tomatoes and bigger tomatoes.

You want to let the soil in your tomato plant become almost dry before you water it again. Tomatoes prefer an arid climate and too much water will produce flavorless, light-colored, grainy-fleshed tomatoes like you find in many super markets. Bark-like scars on your tomatoes are a sign that you haven’t over-watered and your tomatoes can hold up to five times the nutrients of over-watered tomatoes.

Use a hose reel to keep your hose stored for the long times between watering. With your tomatoes away from bugs and pests, you could have the harvest of a lifetime this summer!

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Topsy Turvy Tomato Planter: Read This Before You Hang Your Planters!

November 30th, 2009

Make sure you read this if you are using the Topsy Turvy Tomato Planter this year.  Failure to hang your tomato planter correctly will result in you not having an easy time growing your tomato’s.Because the tomato planter will weigh around seventy pounds when it’s watered and you have a thriving plant hanging it properly is important and a bit tricky.  You have to make sure that you have the proper support to hold your hanger up.Properly supporting your Topsy Turvy is even more important if you have kids or pets as they both like to investigate.  There are two ways to make sure your hanging planter will stay hanging.If you are only planning on using one planter then your best bet is to just go to your local hardware store and buy a more durable hook to hang your planter on.  Make sure it can hold up to eighty pounds to give yourself a little leeway. This is a very inexpensive fix and will help your planter stay in the air where it is supposed to be.If you are using more them one planter there is a different way to go about hanging your Topsy Turvy.If you plan on buying multiple Topsy Turvy Tomato Planters then you should build yourself a wooden frame to hang them up on.  This will take you about two hours to build and if you are anything like me you will already have the wood laying around your house.Depending on how many planters you have just make a nice and simple square or rectangular frame to stick in your yard.  It does not have to be exact, it just has to be sturdy.  Keep in mind that when your tomato plants take off they will cover most of the wood because they grow upwards and it is going to look stunning.Go ahead and get creative with the decoration of the frame if you’d rather it not just be wood.  Put some paint on it, be creative.  You can either make it stand out as a focus of your yard or blend it in with it’s surroundings.Go ahead and spend a little time making the frame something your proud of.  The planters last a long time so that few extra minutes will provide you with years of pleasure.

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Early Tomatoes – Hanging Planters Help Getting Those Early Tomatoes

November 28th, 2009

Most gardeners try their hand at tomatoes, and many consider them the most important crop of they grow. Of course, with tomatoes a problem is that they are not frost tolerant, which really thwarts attempts to get them out early in the spring. The possibility of a late frost or freeze is not just slowing them down but actually killing your crop. So here we take a look at some ideas to not just get your tomatoes to live through the early spring but to flourish and reward you with some early spring tomatoes.

The best strategy is to pick a few plants and start them as the designated early tomatoes. You will want to pick a variety or two that is bred to tolerate the frost but to set fruit in cold weather as well. Look at your seed suppliers catalog, they will usually feature one or more varieties that are early season types that are good to try for your region of the country.

The other thing you have to do is to protect the plants from late frosts. This can be done in a couple of ways. One is to plant your early tomatoes in some type of container, ideally ones that can be moved easily to a protected are like a garage or a basement when there is the threat of a frost or freeze. This can be done with hanging containers or those on the ground, since the threat of frost is usually the greatest when the plants are still small, so this can be an effective approach. For ground container plants you will probably want to select one with casters so it can easily be moved out of harms way.

But just surviving the possibility of frost is good in that it allows you to set the tomato plants out early, but that alone is not enough. You need to do whatever you can to make sure that the plants thrive, not just survive. There are a number of things to do to both container grown tomatoes as well as protecting and encouraging those plants you’ve put in the garden. Cloches, mulches, and location are just a couple of examples of things that have been tried in the past…

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Does the Topsy Turvy Upside Down Tomato Planter Really Work?

November 28th, 2009

The Topsy Turvy Tomato Planter is the newest rage in home vegetable gardening. It promises to grow plentiful tomatoes in an upside down planter. It makes it very easy to pick the tomatoes, offers less bug problems, and almost no chance of the plant collapsing under the heavy strain of producing tomatoes but does it really live up to the promises that it makes?

The pros and cons of the Topsy Turvy Tomato Planter:

Pros– You will no longer have to worry about your plants stalk breaking because of your tomatoes being to heavy.

Cons– The branches might still get all tangled up even though the tomato plant is hanging upside down.

Pros- – You end up with more free space in your garden because yoiur tomato plants are hanging up off of the ground.

Cons — Because it hangs upside down you will need to have a place to put it that has very good support. With all the dirt and water up on top, the Topsy Turvy Tomato Planter can get very heavy.

Watering your tomato plant is another thing. Because the dirt isn’t buried in the ground it will dry out fairly quickly and you will have to water it around two times a day.

Pros– You are very easily able to walk around the plant to pick your tomatoes so that means that you wont have to bend down or crawl around on your knees to enjoy your crop.

Cons– The dirt can get very hot when the sun is hitting the planter so you need to use aluminum foil around the planter so that it will bounce the sunlight off and keep your dirt cool.

Pros– It is easy to water the tomato plants. Just make sure to run water through it until it is clear every week or so to reduce the risk of the roots growing mold.

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