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General discussion regarding the techniques and methods used to successfully grow tomato plants in containers.

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Old March 20, 2016   #16
Ricky Shaw
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Might have been Gerardo, mentioned the need of more drainage on bags in general and maybe these more in particular. The mix will sour fast without good drainage at high temps.

I notice 5gal pail pepper growers, go with 5 holes, 3/4 inch. I'm thinking a five and seven gallon bags should have about that equivalent.
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Old March 20, 2016   #17
elight
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I found that they didn't work for me in central Florida. Maybe because they basically do the opposite of mulch, and instead of holding moisture in, encourage evaporation from all sides. Even using drip irrigation multiple times per day.

But I like the concept and am sure it works well elsewhere. I don't think you need to get fancy with the bags, unless for aesthetic purposes.

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Old March 21, 2016   #18
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I've always wondered, if you put your fabric grow bag into a shallow basin of water, would the fabric act as a wick and so you would have a self-watering container of sorts? I have a few of these bags and wanted to try this but maybe it will do more harm than good.
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Old March 21, 2016   #19
Uncle Doss
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Thank you for all of the contributions to this thread. Please feel free to keep the info coming.

I am considering buying 40 bags to try.
Thinking of brandywine and roma tomatoes in 20, bell peppers in 10, cherry tomatoes in 10
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Old March 21, 2016   #20
ginger2778
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Uncle Doss View Post
Thank you for all of the contributions to this thread. Please feel free to keep the info coming.

I am considering buying 40 bags to try.
Thinking of brandywine and roma tomatoes in 20, bell peppers in 10, cherry tomatoes in 10
Just my opinion, well several others agree, but may I suggest Pruden's Purple instead of Brandywines, because the taste is spectacular and very similar to Brandywines, very similar strong PL plant, but its way more productive. Sorry if I am butting in....
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Old March 21, 2016   #21
Uncle Doss
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I will look into those. I am actually growing Brandywines for the first time this year. My favorite is German Johnson, but last year at the markets, I had multiple customers ask if my GJ were brandywine. After telling them what they were, most still bought them, but all commented on how much they like the Brandywine. That was my reason for growing those.
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Old March 21, 2016   #22
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I have read that you can take a 1 cubic foot bag of potting soil and punch holes for drainage, then transplant directly into the bag of soil. Has anybody ever used this method?

Bb
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Old March 21, 2016   #23
Sun City Linda
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Just following along - container growing is always an interesting topic.
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Old March 21, 2016   #24
BigVanVader
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Uncle Doss View Post
I will look into those. I am actually growing Brandywines for the first time this year. My favorite is German Johnson, but last year at the markets, I had multiple customers ask if my GJ were brandywine. After telling them what they were, most still bought them, but all commented on how much they like the Brandywine. That was my reason for growing those.
In your zone they may do better, here in 7b they are not worth growing. I have customers ask for them as well but I just offer PP. PP was a winner for me last year and was actually more resistant to heat and disease than some of my hybrids. Could have been a fluke but I was impressed. Almost all the maters were over 1lb though which is great for drawing customers but when they realize one mater is 3.50 they have a bit of a shell shocked look sometimes.

Maybe grow em both?

Sorry but I gotta show off mine
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