Re: The Toms are in
Val, I gather you're planting only for your own use.This would never work for people with large gardens or allotments, but for just a few plants ... a dozen or so ...I start them in small pots, keep them in a tray covered with plastic to retain moisture till they germinate. Then move the plants to a South facing windowsill in the morning, then to a West window for the afternoon sun, then back to the South one. I've done this for 40+ years and the plants are in fine fettle when I plant them outside in May. Just a suggestion .....Re: The Toms are in
Thanks DM I think that is the trouble really I don't have a greenhouse now and the only place I can keep them is in the dining room by the patio door, the sun moves round in the afternoon. I've tried turning the plants everyday so they don't lean over, in fact they do get loads of light but never look robust or healthy. I grow them in a multi compost maybe that is the problem, they start off brilliant but end up sickly. I've heard you shouldn't feed them until the tomatoes form but its long before that they start to look sad.Re: The Toms are in
Val-you seem to be do everything right considering you do not have a greenhouse. Are the seedlings getting too dry/wet at any stage? Multipurpose compost is fine but make sure it`s a decent brand-some of it is rubbish.Re: The Toms are in
I have had mine in a month along with my courgettes, giant pink banana squash, globe artichokes, chillies and aubergines. They are all doing fine.Re: The Toms are in
How I wish I had room to try more varieties! Last year was bad for tomatoes in the Mid-Atlantic states, no ones did well. This year I'm just sticking with Super Marmande, which did better than Larissa (glad you apparently liked it, OG!); didn't try any new ones.Re: The Toms are in
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