I started with one straggly tomato plant. (I did buy this.) It looked pretty poor. The photo on the right is from a couple of years ago. I love BIG tomatoes! They make a great sandwich. That is what I am shooting for here, again.
That plant cost me a quarter. Everything else I had on my property. For soil I used a composted pile of leaves, and brush. (This is an experiment, so we will see how it goes.) I am not going to buy any compost, soil, or fertilizer.
I mixed the compost in with some sandy soil from my property. Then I added some egg shells from my chickens into the hole near the tomato plant.
I used my pocket knife (closed) to grind the shells. (My makeshift mortar and pestle.) From what I understand the calcium from the egg shells helps prevent blossom end rot on the fruit. I have done it in the past, and will continue until I am convinced it doesn't work. I like including my chickens in the garden, and they LOVE tomatoes!
Here is the finished product, using leaves for mulch. It looks pretty good. I am going to use some diluted waterized chicken droppings in the future for fertilizer, when needed.
TIPS!
Drill several small holes in the bottom of the bucket for drainage, and add some gravel. I have also found that the buckets won't drain if sat on a flat hard surface like cement. In this case it works to drill the holes near the bottom on the sides. Then they will drain anywhere you choose to put the buckets.
Using buckets, or containers works great, but you have to water more often, and perhaps fertilize more often. They need more attention in general than plants put in the ground. Using buckets does, however, help protect from insects, such as the Dreaded cutworm, and you can move them around if you want to.
Later Folks, and good growing!
Not bad! I think that's pretty cool. I'm interested in seeing how the plant recovers and its fruiting! Thanks for sharing. :)
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Me too. Thank you! Maybe I will make you a sandwich.
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I'll tell you, I only recently started appreciating tomatoes and not turning my nose up at them. One day I cut into one and seriously couldn't resist the temptation from the aroma. Now I can't wait for my own to produce!
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I met a man the other day who said he Hated tomatoes! Lol. I can't even imagine that. Have you grown tomatoes before?
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I've always grown tomatoes but they usually were given away. My mom loves them but generally doesn't have time to garden much so she usually gets the bulk. This year I am determined to preserve my harvest by canning them. I want to make my own pasta sauces and such without using store bought ingredients.
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Tomatoes are great canned. I bet your sauce will be good!
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Nature always amazes me, I've kept a tomato plant alive through the winter, took the cherry tomatoes it produced, and stuck them in the ground last season. It made 10 new plants! and I have a couple volunteer from that plant this season. Just amazing! Keep growing on @binaryflat
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Nature is amazing. My Girlfriend was beside me while I was pruning tomatoes. She took one branch and stuck it in the ground. We laughed. But it grew, and produced. Tomatoes are especially hardy.
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I sure enjoy watching other gardening coming up with their own unique methods to grow food. I use the bucket method too and with my own compost I can grow nice tomatoes and other vegetables every year. The best part of growing vegetables in those buckets is that if the weather turns cold you can bring those pails indoors and gain a few more weeks.
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Exactly my friend. You can bring them in in the spring, and fall, to extend the growing period.
You have some nice stuff going on there. Green tomatoes are so good fried. I always wanted to try pickling green tomatoes.
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