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

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Old January 29, 2015   #1
MikeBiondo
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Default Seedling directly into their final home

Okay, let me preface this with I am in South Florida, so I can put plants out at anytime...

I've started some seeds, and the seedlings have 2-3 sets of true leaves. I've been hardening them off/setting them out in the sun for a couple weeks now. These particular plants will be going into 3 gallon SWC's. I was going to first transplant them into Solo cups, and let them grow a bit more, when I thought...why?

Is there any reason why I shouldn't transplant the seedlings directly into their final home/container. The only thing I can think of would be good hard rain might play havoc with the young plants, but I think I can pretty much protect them from that.

Thanks for any input...

Mike
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Old January 29, 2015   #2
Labradors2
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I think the reason why people pot up tomatoes into larger and larger containers is so that they will develop fibrous roots rather than a long tap root. The fibrous roots are supposed to be better.

However, if I lived in FL, I probably wouldn't bother. I've had volunteer seedlings sprouting in my veggie garden in VT which have thrived to maturity just fine.

Linda
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Old January 29, 2015   #3
kath
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I would think the sooner they're in their final home, the better- especially since you've got warm soil & temps. One year when I lost most of my May planting to frost, I restarted seedlings in June in 72 cell trays but they lived outdoors in the sun from the time they germinated and they were planted out by ~ 4 wks. & they were happy & healthy. Another year I direct seeded Rutgers seeds outdoors in June here when an available area in the garden made me decide to try to can some tomatoes that season- got great plants and an abundant crop well before frost this way.

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