General discussion regarding the techniques and methods used to successfully grow tomato plants in containers.
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April 20, 2018 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jul 2016
Location: Georgia
Posts: 196
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Mix for Transplanting Peppers to Containers and Grow Bags
I am getting ready to transplant my over-wintered peppers, eggplants and one pepper seedling. I have the following:
Miracle Gro Garden Soil Gardenline (Aldi) Garden Soil Soil Conditioner Miracle Gro Peat Moss (Not Much) Left Over Potting Mix From Last Year Black Cow Compost Mushroom Compost Homemade Compost Perlite Vermiculite Floor Dry Osmocote Flower & Vegetable Plant Food (14-14-14) Tomato-tone (3-4-6) Garden-tone (3-4-4) Jobe’s Fast Start (4-4-2) Bone Meal (3-16-0) Garden Lime Alaska Fish Fertilizer (5-1-1) Miracle-Gro Plant Food (24-8-16) Miracle-Gro LiquaFeed (12-4-8) I am hoping that I can use what I already have and not have to get other stuff but my primary goal is to get production before the big heat of July sets in. Do I have the components for a good potting mix, if so what proportions? What should be my fertilizing schedule? I also have this same question for tomatoes but my seedlings are not ready yet. Another question are there certain plants that do better in grow bags versus containers or vice versa? |
April 20, 2018 | #2 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2018
Location: Southwest Florida
Posts: 111
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I wouldn't use any of those soils. The tomato-tone has worked great for my peppers, as has the Alaska fish fertilizer. You don't want to use soil in containers because it is too dense and won't drain well. I used miracle Gro organic potting mix and had trouble with it, the garden soil is much more dense than what I used. I switched to pro-mix which is peat based and it was a game changer. I don't think I would use any compost either. Also throw some garden lime in the mix as well at planting to help adjust the pH and provide calcium to the peppers.
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