General discussion regarding the techniques and methods used to successfully grow tomato plants in containers.
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April 20, 2019 | #14 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: virginia
Posts: 743
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Quote:
The only coir I have ever used is this https://www.walmart.com/ip/Expert-Ga...lock/926142788 This is made by PlantBest in Canada and rebranded with the Walmart brand. It is pre-rinsed using no chemicals. https://plantbest.com/ Someone did an analysis on it and it had less salt than tap water. I did not rinse mine. One less step Expert Gardener Coco Coir is selling at my local Walmart. Brought it home for testing against 2 other highly rated coco coirs from Amazon. Sourced near the oceans, coco coir has salts that often need to be washed out prior to use. After pouring reverse osmosis water through, Expert Gardener measured with the least dissolved solids: Triumph Plant Coco Coir Bricks $16.95 for 6.26 lbs: 939 ppm (Poor, needs lots of washing) Coco Bliss Premium Coconut Coir $19.89 for 10lbs: 594 ppm (Ok, needs more washing) Expert Gardener $7.97 for 8.25lbs: 119 ppm (Very Good) Keep in mind, tap water is typically 200+ ppm so if you're not using reverse osmosis water, this is perfect out of the package. As for what I use in compost. Long list. Almost anything. Grass, weeds, eggshells, plants that are finished in the garden like okra, collards and kale etc, coffee grinds, food waste, wood bark from old firewood, newspaper, cardboard boxes. And I have one special compost drum that just old rotten tomatoes and cantaloupe go in and soldier fly maggots compost that. Composting is fun for me. |
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hydroponic , hydroponics |
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