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Can you grow tomatoes in your house yr round. and ...

can you grow tomatoes in your house yr round. and how can you do it the reason i ask is becuase my neighbor cut dwn her bushes and some fell in my yrd and destroyed my tomatoe plants.

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Hi Jojo,

Of course you can plant tomatoes indoor as long they meet the following requirements:

1) There's an available sunlight at least 5-6 hours a day or you can use light bulbs in areas where there's no sunlight.

2) You can build a greenhouse. Although it's costly, but if you can afford it, greenhouse is dependable and long lasting.

3) Available soil mix for your tomato plants. Your soil mixture should be rich in organic matter (compost, dried manures, etc).

I hope this will help you.

You can visit www.crisramasasa.com for more vegetable tips and resources.

cris

"Don't look at your age, but focus on what you can do for the world, share what you have to benefit mankind, you'll succeed if you'll see others you've helped reap success. Share more to earn more".

You can grow tomatoe plants in your home but not year round,tomatoe plants are annuals they need sunshine fertilizer and pollination,watered regularly if you are to get fruit from the plants, If you did grow the plants in your home you would have to use pollinating spray and it only works one time then your plant is no good.Hope this helps.

I planted tomatoes in a big garden, but also planted 3 tomatoes in (3)  five gallon containers on the deck.  The patio pots yielded green and healthy plants but few tomatoes.  I base that result on lack of pollination.  It is still flowering so that is good for what I want to do with these 3 pots indoors.  The fruits were also small.   But what I have done is take those already established healthy plants, and I've brought them inside the house on weekend of Oct. 2nd.  We had very warm weather but I still brought them inside.  The purpose?   THE PURPOSE OF BRINGING IN A FEW PLANTS IN POTS DURING THE FALL  is to clone them.  By that I mean clip an off-shoot that you find that grow in the V- shaped joints of branches of tomato plants,  and dip the ends into Rootone, a white powdery agent that promotes root growth.  Stick the clipping that is coated with Rootone into moist sandy soil in a small pot, cover with a small plastic bag and out of the sun.  It will form new roots.  As soon as you see root growth,  you have a new plant and it is already about 4 - 6 inches tall.  Plant it into your enriched tomato soil that you make now.  You save a lot of time and money this way.  It will be the same exact plant as the one you originally bought or started from seed.  Keep it in a sunny window about 6 hours a day.  Stake it when necessary if it is an indeterminate plant like heirloom  Brandywine tomatoes as they grow tall and bear fruit over 2 - 3 month period. Determinate tomatoes are shorter,  bush tomatoes that bear fruit all at once like San Marzano plum tomatoes.    

Tomatoes are heavy feeders so make sure they get a good mix of potting soil, well rotted, odorless compost, and fertilizers.  Tomatoes need calcium to prevent blossom end rot so I save egg shells that are well-washed in hot soapy water, and then dried and crushed, and sprinkled throughout a big tub of soil mix that I make myself before my fall tomato plantings for indoor usage.   I have a large 5 gallon red plastic pot with rope handles on the top.  That is my special winter soil mix for indoor plants.  In goes 2 gallons potting mix from the store, 1 gallon peat moss,  1 gallon well rotted odorless manure (can be bought in stores)  and 1 gallon of well rotted odorless compost that I make in the compost pile.  This compost has kitchen scrapes,  egg shells, coffee grinds,  vegetable peelings, leaves, grass clippings, etc.  This gets stirred regularly and should be friable and loose and very dark in color. 

When growing tomatoes indoors, also use a good fertilizer and follow the directions for it.  I also add organic rock phosphate according to directions about 7 inches deep into the potting soil BEFORE I plant the tomatoes into the indoor pots. 

Good luck.  Linda McParland

 

    

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