Never plant tomatoes without this. For large fruits and more tomatoes, follow this

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Published 2024-05-03
Never plant tomatoes without this. For large fruits and more tomatoes, follow this.
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If you follow these few tips when planting tomatoes, you can expect healthy and large fruits and lots of tomatoes. It often happens that we bring tomato seedlings to plant, but the plants seem to wither. If your tomato seedlings are in poor condition before planting, here's what you should do.
Soak the tomato root in water before planting. The root supplies the plant with water and hydrates it. A trick for gardeners is to add a spoonful of sugar to that water. The plants will quickly revive and be ready for planting. Another important tip when planting tomatoes is to plant them deep.
Dig a hole about 25-30 cm deep, so that two-thirds of the tomato plant is underground. Tomato roots grow on the stem wherever it is in contact with the ground. It means that the more tomato stalks in the ground, the bigger the root of the plant will be.

All Comments (21)
  • @GalloPazzesco
    As a tomato growing mad man myself .... I confirm this video to be well done with the possible exception of using spray on the plants, once they blossom, to prevent blossom rot. Tomatoes do like water on their leaves, hopefully in the form of rain .... but during dry hot droughts that we have here in SC, I'll often feed them a liquid diet of calcium to prevent blossom rot because we're below the fall line in sandy, loamy, soil that does not retain water well at all. Also, I'll use crushed cooked egg shells to fortify my sand so-to-speak. And in really hot periods I'll also shade my tomatoes .... it's not uncommon for us to have 110° killer sun days here in SC. One last thing .... if you see something sucking your tomatoes dry, with obvious bite marks .... it's the squirrels. Put a few bowls of water around your tomato plants for the tree rats so that they'll quit playing Dracula with your tomato fruit. BTW ... the best tomatoes in the country are grown here in South Carolina, especially John's Island. In the meantime, subscribed, bell rung, commented, upvoted, liked, shared ... may the algorithm gods smile favorably upon your channel.
  • @rogeradams2536
    Save Banana peels & Cut up & place in large mason jar.Fill jar with water.Wait 2 or 3 days & pour water only around plants.This supplies them with potassium,Phosphorous & Calcium.Rose bushes Really respond well to this also.
  • Add 1 package of yeast and 1 teaspoon of sugar. Mix well sit for a hour in direct sun in 1 gallon of water. Pour at tomato roots very large fruit
  • @jimgarofalo5479
    Some tips that I can pass on are as follows: 1) Fish. Go fishing in the spring for Bluegills. Bury one of them beneath each tomato plant. 2) Watering. I use drip irrigation. Then, when plants need water, I can provide that with the turn of a valve and zero labor. 3) use composted manure for fertilizer. It makes your plants so much more productive.
  • @kitana097
    i dont recommend sugar. total ant infestation.. from experience
  • @user-ff1hn7ve9e
    Tomatoes are weeds. They will grow anywhere. I was in a car wrecking yard one day when a rain storm blew in. I jumped in a nearby wrecked car and on the back seat was a half eaten hamburger. There was a tomato plant growing out of that hamburger 18" tall. You don't need special soil. Just good weather.
  • @Searogue2000
    Here on the Island (BC) the Old Timers advised me that the trick to raising robust heavy yielding plants was to place a salmon head,guts or trimmings in each hole and place tomato on top. It worked wonders.
  • Thanks for the great tips. Another good thing for tomato black spot is dried powdered milk, a very absorbable version of Calcium, works well. Really like your watering tip.
  • Great information, not a lot of cornball talk , just facts and no music in background, thank You
  • @linmonash1244
    Great tips. Will try next time. Last season here was driest on record and all my tomatoes, and many other plants died - despite all watering and mulching and fertilising. YET, 3 Cherry Tomato plants, self seeded in the hot gravel of my patio, took off vigorously, 3 months AFTER Tomato season proper! Have have several punnets worth from them and are still, now mid-winter! producing fruit. Even more flowers developing despite 3 nights of frost ... Go figure! Same with Silverbeet plants. Lot's of seedlings now popping up in the gravel! I'm taking them aout and transferring to the actual veggie garden. but the free-range ones look healthier. Beginning to think should just throw a few seed packets of everything I want to grow to the wind and see what more free ranging does! 😵‍💫
  • @RoseBornagain
    I keep the eggshells then I put them in the oven for 30 minutes then I grain until dust then I use it for my plants as a calcium resource.
  • @skyethewylder
    I used bone meal and our own worm compost in their holes last year. We are first and foremost cannabis growers and I will use pour off from our organic hydroponic grow to feed them with and mulch with the cannabis trim as it is full of nutrients. Happy tomatoes growing in hellish high plains of northern New Mexico. If we can them to grow here, think a climate like Uzbekistan, I think they can grow pretty much anywhere.
  • @joeearley3351
    Your own compost, a little Epsom salts, water only the soil under the plants, pruning use concrete fence for cages, spacing, full sun, yes plant deep use your shovel to dig a wider hole to loosen the soil around your plants and have room for compost dirt mixture.
  • @LillyR539
    I love the cup watering idea thank❤you.
  • @Inubaye.
    Thanks for sharing. I just subscribed!
  • @billienewell
    In southern Florida I use worm tea. Also add bone meal to soil.
  • GOOD STUFF!!! THANKS FOR SHARING!!!😃👍🏾🌱🍅🌿🍅🪴🍅