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A garden is only as good as the ground that it's planted in. Discussion forum for the many ways to improve the soil where we plant our gardens.

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Old April 18, 2013   #1
Itoero
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Default lime

I've read that tomatoes love lime.
Especially when starting to bloom they can use extra lime.
Is it true?

I have a kelp-made lime-fertilizer...
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Old April 19, 2013   #2
Redbaron
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Depends on the soil. Too much lime is bad.
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Old April 19, 2013   #3
zeroma
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If I added lime to my soil here in the Dayton Ohio area, that would be sooo bad! We have a limestone base and mostly need to add sulfur to change the pH the other way.

You really need a soil test to see what you have first.
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Old April 23, 2013   #4
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I'm no soil scientist but I think what the plant likes is the calcium in the lime. So lime would be a good way to provide calcium and raise the PH if the plants were growing in an acidic soil. If the soil is alkaline you would not use lime because you would want to lower the PH, not raise it. Therefore you would have to find another source of calcium. Perhaps bone meal. One of the reasons tomato plants are reported to like calcium is because it reduces the incidence of the dreaded blossom end rot.
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