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Old March 30, 2015   #1
gunrunner
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Default Tomato vines in compost

I have often heard that tomato leaves are poison. Do you put your plants in your compost?


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Old March 30, 2015   #2
AlittleSalt
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For the most part, I don't. I do compost tomatoes though.
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Old March 30, 2015   #3
Worth1
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It is not a good idea to compost tomato vines because you will just help the spread of disease to next year.

That is what I have been told so I dont do it.

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Old March 30, 2015   #4
Redbaron
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I compost my vines.
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"Permaculture is a philosophy of working with, rather than against nature; of protracted & thoughtful observation rather than protracted & thoughtless labour; & of looking at plants & animals in all their functions, rather than treating any area as a single-product system."
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Old March 30, 2015   #5
bower
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I compost mine... wow they make a big stack! Just don't use the compost on tomatoes the next year, or until it's really completely broken down. If you have viruses it's another story, you have to burn them afaik, but most other pathogens are killed in a proper hot compost process.
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Old March 30, 2015   #6
Worth1
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I dont have enough to worry about so I stack mine up in the ditch buy the street and shred them up with the lawn mower.
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Old March 30, 2015   #7
gssgarden
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Only the leaves that I prune. I have a small compost bin so I feel that the thicker vines take VERY long to break down. Anything with disease gets tossed.

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Old March 31, 2015   #8
FISHBONE
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I haven't touched my garden beds ,, still have old vines on the cages.. i was thinking of pulling them all out after removing the tomato cages I used in the one bed,, also think it might be a good idea relocating my new plants off to the side where last years roots fed in the soil. I don't believe I need tilling anymore,, just a couple shovel fulls of mg for each plant when the time comes. And this year going to lay out a couple soak hoses for convenience during the hot summer days.
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Old March 31, 2015   #9
bughunter99
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I burn my vines and compost the bit of ash they may. I do not add them directly to my compost because by the end of the season they have diseases. I cold compost and that does not add enough heat to the process to kill those pathogens.
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Old March 31, 2015   #10
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I compost them all.
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Old March 31, 2015   #11
Stvrob
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Seems like there could be a market for a gardener's blow torch
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Old April 6, 2015   #12
Mike723
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As worth said: you have to be aware of spreading disease, as fungal spores (septoria for example) will over winter in the compost and infect the soil where it's placed; not worth the headache IMO.
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