General discussion regarding the techniques and methods used to successfully grow tomato plants in containers.
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May 9, 2009 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Oxford, MS
Posts: 13
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Worried about excess rain
Hello all, I am new to the forum and new to container planting as well, so I am definitely in need of some advice from the seasoned vets. I have a 31 gallon container going right now with two plants in it, and it has been raining a LOT here almost every day since the plants have been 'tainer-fied (ie -- in the container ). Anyway, I am not worried about there being too much water, so much as I am worried about the abundant rain leaching a lot of the lime and fertilizer out before the plants can benefit from it. Am I being paranoid, or is this a valid concern?
Oh, and one more thing, my plants only get about 4 hours of direct sunlight a day, and a few more indirect -- is that enough, or should I move them to a better location? Thanks in advance. |
May 9, 2009 | #2 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Rock Hill, SC
Posts: 5,346
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It is certainly a concern that container plants need to have their fertilizer, lime, etc. "refreshed" more often during the season than in-ground plants, and rain can exacerbate that.
As for specific quantities to add and application rates, I leave that to container experts. 4 hours sounds very lean for tomato plants. If you can move them, I would.
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May 9, 2009 | #3 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: 6a - NE Tennessee
Posts: 4,538
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leafer, you've probably heard about a "barn raising". Well, at my house, we've had several "tree trimmings". And we're about to have a couple more. If your problem is trees, then look for which branches are the real sun blockers and think about how to trim those without making the tree too ugly for the neighbor folks who view it. In my case, I could care less what someone else thinks. I try to live my life for me, not them. But that's another story.
If anyone needs me tomorrow morning, I'll be at a "tree trimming". Ted
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Ted ________________________ Owner & Sole Operator Of The Muddy Bucket Farm and Tomato Ranch |
May 9, 2009 | #4 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Oxford, MS
Posts: 13
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Feldon -- thanks, yeah, I thought I probably needed to "refresh," as it were, and I will as needed; still a little early for it yet I think, rain or no . . . as for sunlight concerns, that is what I was afraid of . . . .
Ted -- tree trimming is an excellent idea, if only it were that easy: I'm on rental property, but that's not the main thing. It's tree TOPS not branches that are my problem. Ugh. Oh, and to compound the pain in my buttocks, raccoons have been digging in my 'tainer! Those little %$#*%#%! I know they are only doing what nature told them to do, but that doesn't make me any more sympathetic their marauding. Suggestions anyone? I have put out some hot red pepper flakes and am looking into using coyote urine, but does that even work?!? |
May 9, 2009 | #5 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: 6a - NE Tennessee
Posts: 4,538
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Quote:
Ted
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Ted ________________________ Owner & Sole Operator Of The Muddy Bucket Farm and Tomato Ranch |
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May 9, 2009 | #6 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Oxford, MS
Posts: 13
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May 10, 2009 | #7 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: texas
Posts: 1,451
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reply
How about putting some screen over the top of the container leaving an area for it to not touch the plants? They would not be able to dig then. My problem with racoons was that they would take the top of my tomato plants off just trying to get a single tomato off the top. I can't plant corn or melons anymore because they would get it before I could.
Kat |
May 11, 2009 | #8 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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Calcium moves fairly slowly through soils, so I would not add
more lime without doing a pH test first. If pH is still between 6 and 7, a couple of handfuls of gypsum on top of the container mix is probably a better idea (adds calcium, will not raise pH). Gypsum is fairly cheap at big box hardware stores (25-40 pounds for a few dollars) , really cheap at farm supply stores ($5 or less for 80 pounds, usually), so it does not raise the cost of growing tomatoes much to keep a bag of it around for a pH-neutral calcium supplement. Phosphorus stays put especially well once it is in soil or container mix, too, so that is not likely to leach out. Nitrogen is the main thing that you might need to add, and some potassium. They need more potassium as fruit are developing anyway, and a lot of people add more fertilizer that has more potassium than nitrogen or phosphorus at fruitset, even without excessive rain. If you were using a liquid fertilizer soil drench, this would be easy: fish emulsion for the leached nitrogen and molasses for the potassium, ignoring the phosphorus. If you want something that you can top-dress, something like a 5-1-5 to 5-1-10 would be about right. Usually you want 6 hours minimum direct sun. Less slows them down quite a bit (although you are pretty far south so you might get away with 4 hours; I would not know whether to expect that to work without having tried it first).
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