Posts Tagged ‘tomato gardening’

Articles Relating To Tomato Gardening – Part 3

Posted in tomato, tomato gardening on May 22nd, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment

Here are some articles about Tomato Gardening.

  • Flower Meaning and Care » Interesting Tomato Growing Tips-If You … – It is only with buying the actual plants and not with the rest of the tomato gardening supplies you need. The fact of the matter is sometimes you do not end up with the plant you wanted, and most of the tomato growing tips you read …
  • Flower Meaning and Care » A Solid Tomato Watering Schedule Is One … – Tomato gardening tips about water are pretty simple and pretty universal. Tomatoes need about one gallon of water each and every day. Their root systems are vast and many are close to the top of the soil. Even though the soil may be …
  • Tomato Casual » Upside-down Tomato Gardening – By Tomato Queen. Are you a container-gardener hanging your tomato plants? Try growing them upside-down! This recent trend is thought to put less stress on the weight-bearing stems, which require no staking, providing better circulation …
  • Easy Urban Gardening: Tomatoes in a Bucket – The only thing that might stop the urban gardener from growing his own bountiful crop of tomatoes is sunlight. Tomatoes need quite a bit of light—all day would be preferably, but at least six hours a day is a minimum. …

Is the Tomato a Fruit or a Vegetable?

Posted in tomato, tomato gardening on May 18th, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment

Tomato, a fruit or a vegetable.

What is the difference between a fruit and a vegetable?

I thought that I’d do a little research.  I knew it was a fruit, but growing up and harvesting them from a vegetable garden got me thinking.

What is the scientific explanation?  What is the truth?

“The confusion about ‘fruit’ and ‘vegetable’ arises because of the differences in usage between scientists and cooks. Scientifically speaking, a tomato is definitely a fruit. True fruits are developed from the ovary in the base of the flower, and contain the seeds of the plant (though cultivated forms may be seedless). Blueberries, raspberries, and oranges are true fruits, and so are many kinds of nut. Some plants have a soft part which supports the seeds and is also called a ‘fruit’, though it is not developed from the ovary: the strawberry is an example. As far as cooking is concerned, some things which are strictly fruits may be called ‘vegetables’ because they are used in savoury rather than sweet cooking. The tomato, though technically a fruit, is often used as a vegetable, and a bean pod is also technically a fruit. The term ‘vegetable’ is more generally used of other edible parts of plants, such as cabbage leaves, celery stalks, and potato tubers, which are not strictly the fruit of the plant from which they come. Occasionally the term ‘fruit’ may be used to refer to a part of a plant which is not a fruit, but which is used in sweet cooking: rhubarb, for example. So a tomato is the fruit of the tomato plant, but can be used as a vegetable in cooking.”

Source

So there you got  the answer to whether a Tomato is a Fruit or Vegetable.

Articles Relating To Tomato Gardening – Part 2

Posted in tomato, tomato gardening on May 6th, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment

Here are some articles about Tomato Gardening.


  • Survey: On tomato gardening, what should one do to discourage … – I finally found the gross tomato worm that has been wrecking my tomato plants which I’ve been nurturing in one of those deck gardening contraptions. What is the.
  • Organic Tomato Gardening – With the help of organic tomato gardening, you’ll be able to say goodbye to those shop-bought tomatoes with tough skins, and tasteless, pale flesh. Whenever tomatoes are home grown organically and are naturally ripened, you can pluck a …
  • Organic Tomato Gardening – With the help of organic tomato gardening, you can say goodbye to those shop-bought tomatoes with tough skins, and tasteless, pale flesh. Whenever tomatoes are home grown organically and are naturally ripened, it is easy to pluck a …
  • Organic Tomato Gardening – With organic tomato gardening, you can say goodbye to those shop-bought tomatoes with tough skins, and tasteless, pale flesh. Whenever tomatoes are home grown without chemicals and therefore are naturally ripened, you can pluck a tomato …


Pruning Tomato Plants

Posted in pruning tomato, tomato gardening on May 2nd, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment

A little on Pruning Tomato Plants

First of all, opinions are like armpits.  Everybody has two of them and they both stink and the the more you work in the garden the stinkier they get.

I wanted to write a little on Pruning tomato plants and thought that I would investigate this on the internet.  There are 5 reasons that somebody wrote and everybody has copied it.

Some people say that you should only prune to maintain your plants size.  Depending on how you are growing them you need to vary your pruning.  Thats means, are they in a cage?

Are they upside down?  Are they in a raised bed?  How much space have you allocated for the particular plant?   Some say that pruning will only reduce your production.

All these sound fine.

Remember that this is a plant and it’s reason for being here is to grow and reproduce.

So the reason for pruning is either to keep it within your allocated boundries and/or to help it be more competitive in nature and produce for you high quality fruit.

Some further information for reading.

More to come later on Pruning Tomato Plants

Tip for Better Tomatoes

Posted in pruning, tomato gardening, videos on April 24th, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment

Pruning tip for tomatoes, Pinching off Suckers.

Articles Relating To Tomato Gardening – Part 1

Posted in tomato on April 16th, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment

Here are some articles about Tomato Gardening.

  • Organic Tomato Gardening – With organic tomato gardening, you’ll be able to leave behind those shop-bought tomatoes with tough skins, and tasteless, pale flesh. Whenever tomatoes are home grown without chemicals and therefore are naturally ripened, …
  • Organic Tomato Gardening – Through organic tomato gardening, you can say goodbye to those shop-bought tomatoes with tough skins, and bland, pale flesh. When tomatoes are home grown organically and are naturally ripened, it is easy to pluck a tomato off your own …
  • Organic Tomato Gardening | Google The Elite – Visualize sinking your teeth into a freshly picked, wonderfully ripe, sweet and organically grown tomato, with all the juice running down your chin.
  • Organic Tomato Gardening – With the help of organic tomato gardening, you can leave behind those shop-bought tomatoes with tough skins, and bland, pale flesh. When tomatoes are home grown without chemicals and are naturally ripened, it is easy to pluck a tomato …

Tomato Gardening

Posted in tomato on April 12th, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment

What’s to love about Tomato Gardening?

It all comes down to the five senses.

  1. Sight
  2. Sound
  3. Smell
  4. Touch
  5. Taste
But first what do I remember about Tomato Gardening.

I remember when I was growing up watching my grandfather eating tomatoes from his garden.

I remember my grandfather and grandmother planting, tending and harvesting tomatoes from the garden.

I remember him watering, fertilizing, digging up and removing the soil and having a truck load of new soil brought in.

I remember my grandmother sending us down to pick tomatoes and various other vegetables from the garden and having them brought to the kitchen before lunch and dinner.

My grandfather always loved to come in from the outside after working and eating a plate of sliced tomatoes  from the garden and sprinkled with sugar.

Tomato gardening has been something that I remember since I was a little kids.  It brings back wonderful childhood memories of working in the garden with my grandparents.

Sight

What does the tomato look like?  Color, Size and Shape of the tomato,  The vine, the leaves the soil.  Think about everything that you take in as you look at a tomato

Sound

The sound of the tomato as you pluck it from the vine,  Slice it with a knife.  The sound as you take a bite of the tomato

Smell

What smells do you associate with a tomato?  Starting in the Garden, tilling the soil, putting down the fertilizer, harvesting the tomato.

Cutting and cooking  the tomato and finally eating the tomato.

Touch

What do you feel when you pick up the tomato.  Is it firm, soft, mushy, bruised?  What do you feel when you are inspecting the tomato and/or the vine?

Taste

Finally, the tasted.  What does the tomato taste like.  Is sweet or sour?  Is it juicy or is it dry?   What do you taste?  What do you personally like when you taste a tomato?

This is what tomato gardening is to me.

Extra Reading For Tomato Gardening

Posted in tomato, tomato gardening on April 7th, 2010 by admin – Be the first to comment

Some Extra reading for Tomato Gardening


  • Organic Tomato Gardening – With organic tomato gardening, you’ll be able to leave behind those shop-bought tomatoes with tough skins, and tasteless, pale flesh. Whenever tomatoes are home grown without chemicals and therefore are naturally ripened, …
  • Organic Tomato Gardening – Through organic tomato gardening, you can say goodbye to those shop-bought tomatoes with tough skins, and bland, pale flesh. When tomatoes are home grown organically and are naturally ripened, it is easy to pluck a tomato off your own …
  • Organic Tomato Gardening | Google The Elite – Visualize sinking your teeth into a freshly picked, wonderfully ripe, sweet and organically grown tomato, with all the juice running down your chin.
  • Organic Tomato Gardening « Edmond’s Blog – With organic tomato gardening, you’ll be able to say goodbye to those shop-bought tomatoes with tough skins, and tasteless, pale flesh. When tomatoes are home grown organically and therefore are naturally ripened, you can pluck a tomato …