9 Tomato Growing Myths to Avoid!

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июн 2024
  • When it comes to tomatoes, we've grown hundreds of varieties here at Epic Gardening - and we've tested just about EVERY method of growing them that you can dream up. Growing tomatoes comes with a whole host of interesting advice, tips, and tricks, but also a few myths that simply aren't true. Here are 9 of the most common ones from our journey through the world of tomatoes.
    00:00 - Intro
    00:20 - Yellow Or Dying Leaves
    01:22 - Sauce Tomatoes
    02:27 - Tickling Flowers
    03:26 - Sun Ripening
    03:52 - Pruning Myth
    05:18 - Blossom End Rot
    06:09 - Vine Ripening
    07:37 - Refrigerating Tomatoes
    09:32 - Too Much Watering
    IN THIS VIDEO
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Комментарии • 646

  • @epicgardening
    @epicgardening  Год назад +33

    Got a myth you think needs busting? Let us know below, and while you're at it grab a deal on Birdies Beds (have a few on sale for the next week or so): shop.epicgardening.com/collections/birdies-original

    • @lukaslambs5780
      @lukaslambs5780 Год назад +5

      Not so much a myth but just a lack of awareness of what things are and aren’t good potential soil/compost additives. For example, if you have pet reptiles and keep colonies of insects as feeders, their poop (frass) is just as good as worm castings for nutrients. Pond scum is also fantastic. Egg shells are NOT nearly as effective in compost piles as people think they are.

    • @itatane
      @itatane Год назад +2

      What about myths about weeds? I've found a great many plants that people stress about are edible and nutritious. For example, Galinsoga parviflora, a VERY prolific weed, is actually a wonderful herb for soups (guasca). Some weeds are also good companion plants as well.

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  Год назад +2

      @@itatane Love this

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  Год назад +1

      @@lukaslambs5780 Great call!

    • @iamjustkiwi
      @iamjustkiwi Год назад +4

      I'll echo the "weeds" issue. A lot of my plants seem to do very well when I let clover, dandelion, purslane and other supposed weeds hang out as long as they aren't completely choking the soil, and those are all edible to some degree or another which is an added bonus. Also my iguana and tortoise LOVE dandelions so they save me a ton on having to buy food during the growing months.

  • @Toffnm
    @Toffnm 26 дней назад +85

    Here's another one: You can freeze whole tomatoes! Last year I didn't have the energy to make a whole bucket of sauce so I just pulled the green top off of the tomatoes, threw all of them in a zip lock bag into the freezer, and we've been pulling out whatever we need for stews, soups, sauces etc throughout winter.

    • @saralleverino
      @saralleverino 22 дня назад +12

      I would agree with this with one caveat. The texture changes when they are thawed, so they aren't great for eating raw. Perfect for cooking, though.

    • @lauranilsen8988
      @lauranilsen8988 21 день назад +8

      Yes. That’s what my friend says. If I’m remembering right she also said the skins slip right off once they thaw.

    • @cathiemariekelch75
      @cathiemariekelch75 20 дней назад +6

      I’ve been doing this for years! Works great, especially for roasted tomato sauce in the dead of winter. Yum 🍅

    • @starydwumas7481
      @starydwumas7481 20 дней назад +3

      I would rather cook them and put them into jar than wasting space and energy in my freezer to take out something you still need to cook.

    • @LincolnHawk-bk5yr
      @LincolnHawk-bk5yr 17 дней назад +7

      We've been doing this for years. We always seem to have more tomatoes than canning jars. The ones we freeze don't get blanched, just thrown in a bag an put in the freezer. They work very well for sauces, just as well as the canned ones.

  • @andrearc3002
    @andrearc3002 Год назад +141

    I started cutting my tomatoes at that 50% ripe stage and it stopped my tomatoes from being plagued by tomatoe worms. Thank you for posting this video. It's so informative.

    • @Lilian040210
      @Lilian040210 Месяц назад +1

      My grandma always picks almost green ones, otherwise they crack.

    • @Tridentor
      @Tridentor Месяц назад +2

      in Europe it's almost a rule to harvest tomatoes at 50% and then let them ripe indoors

    • @45graham45
      @45graham45 20 дней назад

      Must they be in the sun to ripen indoors?

    • @thomastonnessen8056
      @thomastonnessen8056 12 дней назад

      Use BT spray it is a life saver if you want a natural pesticide it is a natural fungi .

    • @woodson21
      @woodson21 8 дней назад +3

      @@45graham45No they don’t. We ripen ours both on a North facing window ledge and a brown paper sack in the pantry. The pantry ones ripen just as well as the window ones

  • @WARHORSE465
    @WARHORSE465 Год назад +139

    I absolutely love the fact that you all show your tomato plants as they exist naturally, warts and all. It’s a positive reinforcement for me to see a few yellow leaves or dried out branches on the plants when you make the videos. It helps me not freak out when, what I thought where “issues” with my plants, are just nature. Not cleaning everything up to be “Instagram perfect” before filming is very refreshing and it gives me more confidence to know my plants are as “normal” as yours are. Thank you, as always for your refreshing perspectives, positive energies, and super-helpful education. EpicG has a lifelong fan in me!

    • @jaykeinnes6793
      @jaykeinnes6793 11 месяцев назад +3

      As with most things online 95% of what you see is made perfect for the shot, gardening is no different :)
      Also something to remember is just because you're not doing as well doesn't mean your doing it wrong, I have changed from acreage to pots and was worried for a bit and stressed out as i wasnt seeing the results i had in the ground, started reading a heap and watching heaps online and now I know that pots are far more fickle than large in-ground beds and even though I'm not having the same success(don't mean to brag but my gardens where top tier is terms of produce per sqm) and now ive accepted that they will be slower and get knocked around a bit more by weather until I get my ratios of soil components nearly spot on and watering nearly spot on and if I don't learn that much then I know I can still keep them healthy and happy in pots, I just need an extra plant or two compared to my old modified huglekulture/Ruth stout hybrid beds.
      Good luck and happy harvesting my friend, big love from down under!

  • @alindasue
    @alindasue Год назад +93

    My cherry tomatoes produce fruit steadily for a good couple months or so. Last year, after a couple months of picking tomatoes every day, I still had a lot of green tomatoes left on the vine when the frosts started to hit. Before pulling the plants for the year, I picked off about 3 gallons of green tomatoes, figuring I would do something with them. What I ended up doing was snacking on ripe tomatoes every day for the next few weeks as they gradually ripened off the vine in my house. I plan on doing the same with this year's end of season green tomatoes too.

    • @silkee1922
      @silkee1922 Год назад +3

      Way to go.👍

    • @kimberlygiacometti6041
      @kimberlygiacometti6041 Год назад +4

      I did that a few years ago. One of my furbabies loved the cherry tomatoes; pooped...passed away....left us another cherry tom. plant. I cherished that plant. He killed(tilled) that plant last year..,...I was heartbroken.

    • @CWorgen5732
      @CWorgen5732 3 месяца назад +9

      I know this is a year later...
      But we did that this fall. I pulled all the tomatoes the night before the first frost. The ripest cherries were immediately halved and put into dinner or frozen. The larger ones were sliced for salmon burgers. As soon as any tomato started to look a tiny bit soft, it was chopped and frozen for future soup. After a few days, the originally green tomatoes were sorted by color: solid green, green-yellow, yellow-orange, almost red, and Ripe! I kept them in mesh baskets and plastic blueberry cartonsfor airflow, and none of them rotted ❤ over time they all ripened, and nearly none were lost to frost or rot!

    • @SpaceMiner007
      @SpaceMiner007 Месяц назад +3

      I pickled about 10 lbs of last year's green tomatoes.

    • @rachelash7299
      @rachelash7299 Месяц назад +3

      An old gardener I know told me to pull the plant out whole at the end of the season and green ones on it, hang it upside down in the sun but out of the frost (like under the eaves for example). We're just about to get frosts here so I'm keen to see how it works.

  • @thepeff
    @thepeff Год назад +84

    I was growing some turned garlic in a plastic container by my window with some homegrown compost. A tomato seed sprouted from the compost and I decided to see what would happen and left it there. It strangled out four garlic plants and started climbing my window and is putting down roots in surrounding potted plants. Instead of a trellis I've just been taping the vine to the window. I've been getting some decent cherry tomatoes lately and I plan on propagating the seeds since the tomatoes taste decent and clearly this plant will stop at nothing to survive.

  • @ChipClarkSD
    @ChipClarkSD Год назад +57

    The main reason Roma and cherry tomatoes are better for sauce is that they have much more pectin which helps thicken the sauce

    • @Bob_Adkins
      @Bob_Adkins Месяц назад +7

      Roma makes a thick sauce, but they have a dull taste. Cherries have a brighter taste, and I wish there were more large varieties because of their great taste and hardiness.

    • @Dovey62
      @Dovey62 27 дней назад +2

      ​@@Bob_AdkinsTry Amish Paste!

  • @iamjustkiwi
    @iamjustkiwi Год назад +53

    I gotta say it's weird to me seeing that there are a lot of issues people have with tomatoes because I can't stop them from growing! The various spoiled ones I have tossed into my compost now pop up in ever plant I add the compost to so I just yank out the seedling and replant them somewhere else, and they tolerate it well because of the omnipotence of their stems to grow roots. Now I have like 8 random varieties growing all over my property and it's fun seeing what they come out with!

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  Год назад +13

      It's funny the plants we do / don't have issues with!

    • @iamjustkiwi
      @iamjustkiwi Год назад +7

      @@epicgardening for me it's been cukes, and I learned that since I almost exclusively do container growing, that they are ESPECIALLY prone to standing water issues. This year I did side by side experiments with fabric vs traditional plastic pots and the difference has been amazing! That said I also have an aquaponics setup and the cukes in there do even better, so I think it actually has to do with oxygen in the water more so than the water itself. Since the aquaponic eater is constantly moving it is highly oxygenated and therefore the roots are happy even being constantly wet.

    • @MrsB197something
      @MrsB197something Месяц назад +1

      I have struggled with cucs for years. Im trying grow bags this year​@@iamjustkiwi

    • @iamjustkiwi
      @iamjustkiwi Месяц назад +1

      @@MrsB197something I hope it goes well for you, I actually just started all my cuke seedlings for this year yesterday! As long as they stay consistently moist, warm, and well fertilized in the grow bags they seem to do really well. The other thing I learned is that growing em on a trellis is super helpful because the slugs where I live go absolutely ham over them and I don't really like sharing with them so having them off the ground makes it much easier.

    • @Frostfern94
      @Frostfern94 9 дней назад

      Yeah same here! They just grow in cracks in the concrete and side of the road here

  • @karen_james
    @karen_james Год назад +22

    Totally agree with you guys on the deep watering your tomato plants. Last year for me I was inconsistent with my watering and every plant got hit with BER. This year I made a concerted effort to be consistent with my watering by checking each plant at the soil level for moisture. If dry an inch down, I’d water. Kept up with regular fertilizing and big difference, I used deep compost as a mulch and nutrition. Not one plant developed BER this year! ❤️

    • @2pugman
      @2pugman Месяц назад +1

      I also plant with a powdered lime slurry as I plant the small tomato. It's been two years since I had a BER problem.

  • @paulgaras2606
    @paulgaras2606 Год назад +36

    One thing to remember about storing ripe tomatoes in the fridge is that tomatoes produce a ton of ethylene. In a closed container or small space like a fridge this could cause the tomatoes not to last as long as one might expect. I do refrigeration contracting and one of my customers is a produce wholesaler. Tomato storage is a big issue for them and over ripening can cost them a lot of money.

    • @harambeegardens8705
      @harambeegardens8705 Год назад +6

      Blanch them & put them in the freezer.

    • @thenicksgardenchannel
      @thenicksgardenchannel Месяц назад +3

      @@harambeegardens8705 yes or I oven roast them, with some peppers too then freeze.

  • @pascalxus
    @pascalxus Год назад +31

    I thought I knew all the basics of tomatoes. But, you guys have taught me several knew things today! I had no idea tomatoes could go in the fridge. and thanks for the comment about bringing tomatoes in at 50% ripeness. My mice won't be happy about that lolz. Keep up the great work guys. You guys are Awesome!

    • @eileenwineinger3173
      @eileenwineinger3173 Год назад

      This tip is helping me too. Less for the birds/ mouse and more for my hubby.

  • @sunflowerhill4349
    @sunflowerhill4349 Год назад +21

    Yep, I agree with all of these! Definitely things I have discovered by trying them out for myself.
    You can also save most of the green tomatoes at the end of the season by picking them, and layering them in cardboard boxes, leaving a bit of stem on, stem end facing down. They will ripen gradually in the box, so you get tomatoes way into winter (cool temperate climate where I live in Australia). They just have to have started turning from hard dark green into a paler green with white starting to come through.

    • @sbffsbrarbrr
      @sbffsbrarbrr Год назад +3

      I discovered your green tomato info last season when I cut back all the tomatoes in mid October. Saved a lot of the green ones to make fried green tomatoes. Made one batch and decided it wasn't worth the effort 😁. So the rest of the tomatoes were sitting in a basket in the house, intended for the compost pile. And low and behold, most of them continued to ripen. That was a nice end of season surprise!

    • @gracehuey5160
      @gracehuey5160 Год назад +1

      Thanks for the info. I’m going to try this.

    • @WillPellKB926
      @WillPellKB926 17 дней назад

      As a kid growing up in Michigan, we get a brilliant, but short, growing season. At the end of October, or so, I would pick all the decent tomatoes and we would wrap them in newspaper ( the horror) and then put them in paper grocery bags and put them in the basement. I did all the picking and most of the wrapping, but my mom would pick out the ripe ones and we would use them for anything. We probably had tomatoes up until December. Also, my Mom routinely put tomatoes in the refrigerator and they were great. Then all the snobs said that this was wrong and I wasted a lot of tomatoes. Conclusion: listen to your Mother.

  • @danikashton13
    @danikashton13 Год назад +3

    Thank you for the video! New gardener here in my first year of gardening, and my beefsteak tomatoes just started seriously yellowing at the bottom. I've been trimming them as I notice yellowing in an attempt to stop or prevent disease. It's reassuring to know that I haven't done anything wrong!

  • @NickMacKenzie
    @NickMacKenzie Год назад +19

    love seeing the combined perspectives of kevin, jacques, and chris all together in a video

  • @squashit339
    @squashit339 Год назад +6

    I really needed this video! Last couple years I've had a lot of lower dying leaves on my tomatoes and thought I had a HUGE problem and come to find out that it's normal 😅

  • @Jacq892
    @Jacq892 Месяц назад +2

    I'm glad you settled the refrigerate tomato myth! So much info!

  • @wurzelle1999
    @wurzelle1999 21 день назад +3

    What a nice, informative, pleasantly delivered video. One of the very best!

  • @busker153
    @busker153 Месяц назад +11

    I did not know tomatoes ripen from the inside out, and from the bottom up. Three cheers for a regular, daily regime of continuing education! (And, three more for Epic Gardening!)

  • @ceecee-thetransplantedgardener
    @ceecee-thetransplantedgardener Год назад +1

    After 10 years+ of growing tomatoes and cukes in ground with zero problems, I moved them to raised beds (variety of reasons, too long to go into) and man - have I had the issues. It has taken 4 months to decipher watering, fert, and a bunch of other problematics. Very humbling. BUT - I'm hanging in; this video hit many of those points and affirmed my process is right on track. Great vid - Thanks!

  • @MyAussieGardenKitchen
    @MyAussieGardenKitchen Год назад +2

    G'day.
    I LOVED the fact you shared about picking before ripening. I have a problem with mice here in country Australia and when it comes to tomatoes, I like to pick them before ripening, so they mice don't eat them. This has saved my from losing so many tomatoes.
    All the information was great, but that certainly is a great one to share when people have pest issues.
    Thanks as always for the quality content and all the best.
    Daz.

  • @Anjerz
    @Anjerz Год назад +6

    I follow a few of the Epic tomato tips. I TRY to leave my Everglade bushy when I can. But Florida can be humid, even for Florida varieties so I still get septoria on my leaves and about once or twice a year I have to groom the plant back to almost nothing and hit restart. It works fine for me. Mostly I groom the plant to avoid to much interior growth. I love my giant shaggy everglades tomato. 🍅

  • @FrozEnbyWolf150
    @FrozEnbyWolf150 Год назад +20

    I've been having massive pest problems this year, so I'm reluctant to leave my tomatoes on the vine too long, and have been picking them the moment they start to show any signs of ripening. It turns out this makes little to no difference, as they will continue to ripen off the vine anyway. Just as long as you don't pick them when they're completely unripe, they'll taste just fine in the end.

  • @SandraPerez-tz3fw
    @SandraPerez-tz3fw Год назад +15

    Omgosh this year was my first time growing tomatoes from seed. I was beating myself up because the lower leaves kept falling off!! Happy to know that's totally normal. 😁😊

    • @theshoemeister2582
      @theshoemeister2582 Год назад +1

      Oh

    • @pennylaur7687
      @pennylaur7687 Год назад +2

      It CAN be tomato blight as well. A fungus they get from the soil that splashes up when it rains or if you spray over tops of plants instead of just the ground. I try to be organic but gave in this year n bought a copper fungicide spray. I also keep the bottom leaves pruned up off the soil.

  • @helenmcclellan452
    @helenmcclellan452 Год назад

    I always learn something new or I gain greater understanding when I watch your videos. Thank you!

  • @user-ug5sb6qg1u
    @user-ug5sb6qg1u 29 дней назад +3

    If I go a couple days without watering in Oklahoma I don't have to worry about them cracking, they'll all be dead. 100+ temperature days for months on end are no joke. I do like this video, subscription added.

  • @barbiedueck2273
    @barbiedueck2273 11 месяцев назад

    We built “wicking boxes” this year….. the tomatoes love them. The water is in the bottom of the garden box so the plants roots grow downward and have a consistent source of moisture. We live in Canada and are experiencing a drought… with hot dry weather. This method has allowed me to only have to add water once a week (to 10:days ) thru this weather. My tomato plants (as well as everything else I’ve been planting so far 🤞🏻) are growing strong and well.
    I’m still watering with rainwater we caught over a month ago as we now use so little.
    I’m just so happy about how well they are working I had to pass along.

  • @teresaellis7062
    @teresaellis7062 Месяц назад +1

    I am glad to hear the information when to harvest tomatoes. I often kept missing the timing of the '"perfectly ripe" tomato and having tomatoes go over ripe or splitting. I will pick them when they are 50% so we can have them on the counter when they fully ripen, not hidden in the leaves.
    Living in Western Washington with LOTS of rain, we do have to supplement our soil with calcium unless we cover the soil during the winter rainy season. My mom had very little success with onions until I researched what might be going wrong. Turns out tomatoes aren't the only plants that want calcium. Root veggies love calcium. We mixed bone meal in the soil before putting in onion starts, and that year she had MASSIVE onions.

  • @erinsmith2373
    @erinsmith2373 Год назад +15

    Thank you for discussing blossom end rot!!! sooo many people keep telling others to put egg shells in their soil next season to fix it

    • @Bob_Adkins
      @Bob_Adkins Месяц назад +3

      Egg shells take about 10,000 years to decompose. Well, maybe not that long, but a lot longer than say bone meal.

    • @xavkoston16
      @xavkoston16 Месяц назад

      Egg shells is a total myth for adding calcium to the soil. Take too much time to decompose and there is not that much calcium available for the plant in an egg shell.

    • @robertkattner1997
      @robertkattner1997 22 дня назад

      I dissolve antacid tablets in water and water tomatoes with it.

  • @PegsGarden
    @PegsGarden Год назад +3

    Super informative video, really I have learned so much from your channel Kevin and I have been gardening now for 14 years, also really enjoy you having Chris and Jacque's input they have so much good information!!

  • @denisebrady6858
    @denisebrady6858 Год назад +2

    What a brilliant video- Thank You Guys as you have answered a lot of my questions regarding my tomato growing. Cheers Denise- Australia

  • @AjArpopP52
    @AjArpopP52 Год назад +1

    Great video! Thank you! I watch a run of different videos and get great information but I really liked watching this video.

  • @johnduffy6546
    @johnduffy6546 Месяц назад +2

    This was very informative. Thank you

  • @susannowak5544
    @susannowak5544 16 дней назад +2

    Fantastic and many thanks: now I know why we had such a sad crop last year, and how to avoid more blossom end rot. Whoopie!,

  • @siamstation
    @siamstation Год назад +4

    What a fabulous information tomato video. In Australia, we are just starting to plan our crops of tomatoes for the upcoming season. I'm going to try this coming seasons tomato plants, growing them with some of your techniques. Had a fantastic season last year 😊. Blessings from Australia ❤️

  • @the-trojan
    @the-trojan Месяц назад

    Great video! good to have all this info in one spot and concise!

  • @Megan-nt7dm
    @Megan-nt7dm Год назад +4

    I didn't have time to deal with my pots/wood beds this year past dumping all my worm compost on them. I currently have an absolute tangled mess of cucumbers, zucchini and so many cherry tomatoes 🤣 I love that I didn't have to start seeds, but I still got the three things I like to grow on my porch

  • @dustinpage123
    @dustinpage123 Месяц назад

    Great job with this video, I love to see a team of people making a video together.

  • @busker153
    @busker153 Год назад +1

    Definitely well worth the time to watch!

  • @sully9088
    @sully9088 Год назад +2

    I grew tons of cherry tomatoes last summer thanks to the amazing advice from this channel. I was hesitant to pick the tomatoes when they were 50% ripe, but it's really cool to see them turn bright red right in the kitchen after a few days.

  • @rockycannon4099
    @rockycannon4099 Год назад

    Great video! I was totally falling for some of these.

  • @scottscriticalmass
    @scottscriticalmass Год назад +1

    Always enjoy the tri-expert videos and this one is no different... Thanks to all 3 of you for the great advice! I'd love to hear Jacque's recipe for his Sun Gold Cherry Tomato pasta sauce recipe. Thank you!!

  • @semillerimages
    @semillerimages Год назад +1

    Thanks for the video! Super informative!

  • @anniecampbell8554
    @anniecampbell8554 Год назад

    I love your faux ‘special gift’ teasers. Thanks for being such a fun presenter / teacher!

  • @EngageYourFrontalLobe
    @EngageYourFrontalLobe 29 дней назад

    Thanks for sharing all of this great information! ❤

  • @troygillespie
    @troygillespie Месяц назад +2

    100% correct myth-busting! Keep up the good work battling persistent gardening myths

  • @jbigfeather
    @jbigfeather Год назад +2

    Wow! This is an impressive video having the three of you giving your info covers all the questions I have wondered about. This year I wasn’t able to have a garden due to a broken arm but there’s always next year. The squash video was really helpful as I have a few volunteers that are doing well, they popped up after the monsoon season started.

  • @cathleenbaldwinmaggi2252
    @cathleenbaldwinmaggi2252 Год назад

    I LOVED this with all of you adding to the info. I will add... If you are a fish keeper, any fish that die through the year, freeze them. Bury them about a foot deep under your tomatoes, add a gallon jug with holes you have punched into it buried around the base of the tomatoes. You water by adding to the jug, any organic fertilizer you add to the jug, remember too much water gives you leaves not tomatoes.

  • @bessiewilson1784
    @bessiewilson1784 Месяц назад +3

    In Alaska we would wrap green tomatoes in newspaper & have them at Christmas we check them every few weeks

  • @davinasquirrel7672
    @davinasquirrel7672 Месяц назад +3

    Indeed I started harvesting the larger tomatoes earlier, at about 70% ripe. I figured that removing them at this stage would help the remaining ones ripen faster.
    Anyway, I only had five plants going this year, and way too many tomatoes!
    Thanks for the pruning tips. I am never quite sure what I am doing there, making it up as I go along!

  • @rachellemazar7374
    @rachellemazar7374 Год назад +1

    Such great tips, I didn’t know about the 50% ripe harvesting. The blossom end rot tip, the pruning tip and so much of this video will help me a lot. I have been a firm believer in never refrigerating tomatoes but I will give your tip a try.👩‍🌾

  • @GreenGardenGamer
    @GreenGardenGamer Год назад

    my neighbor is on holiday with his family and I'm watching his tomatoes while growing my own.
    he has sungolds and I just made a pasta sauce with them, some garlic and spices, and it was SO good. Can just snack on them off the vine or throw them in salads/sauces/curries for added acidity/sweetness

  • @Kakuma-Notsori
    @Kakuma-Notsori Год назад

    Thanks you for making things clear once for all about those myths 😉

  • @sherde10
    @sherde10 Год назад

    Love you guys and your informative fun videos - I’ve never had much luck with tomatoes but this year I’m sure it will be a different story!

  • @retiefgregorovich810
    @retiefgregorovich810 10 дней назад +1

    Watering has always been a question with tomatoes. I hear water every few days, keep it consistently moist, don't water every day. The best tomato gardener I knew watered his tomatoes three times a day with a drip system. I've been using that methodology for ten plus years now. I do get end rot problems now and then.

  • @jimscharfenberger2
    @jimscharfenberger2 Месяц назад

    Thank you for this most informative discussion of popular tomato growing myths.
    Sincerely, Jim. Master Gardener, Orange County New York.

  • @evelynbarnes8060
    @evelynbarnes8060 Месяц назад +1

    This old but very informative for me thanks you😊

  • @Eriuqsrednef
    @Eriuqsrednef 24 дня назад +1

    I live in England. But although our climate is different from yours, your tips & tricks have proved to work here.
    I belong to an allotment society too & have sent your links online to our members, so they can try the grafting of tomatoes & pruning tips. It is a shame that over here, we do not have the excellent simple growing aids you have across the pond. Over here I use calcified seaweed in my soil every 2 years, as this increases worms & aireates & conditions the soil for the following 2 years. I also use Chicken manure called 6X over here as a rich treatment for the soil, for a acid soil.
    Also I have recently moved into dual or triple cropping( Bio diversity). Using plants that compliment each other, putting the minerals, enzimes etc into the soil & the other plants use them and vis versa.
    So thanks for a great set of videos. Keep going, really interesting & maybe you could look into this use of mixed veg growing. ??

  • @thegardenscientist
    @thegardenscientist Год назад +1

    Great video guys! Spring is on its way soon here in South Africa! I cant wait to start my Tomato's!

  • @evropej
    @evropej Месяц назад

    Thank you for all the advice! I can’t wait to harvest my tomatoes now

  • @marvinbrock960
    @marvinbrock960 Месяц назад

    I’ve said that it before, thank you so much for the content.. I’ve learned so much over the past few seasons from watching your vids! 🇺🇸

  • @rick6605
    @rick6605 Год назад

    Fantastic presentation of the facts!

  • @garethjones3660
    @garethjones3660 Месяц назад

    Excellent informative video thank you please keep making these videos.

  • @DMLondon
    @DMLondon Год назад

    Loved this video I learned something new!

  • @montanaliving4769
    @montanaliving4769 Год назад +2

    I always pick my large tomatoes at half ripe, love them.

  • @manu_vuna
    @manu_vuna Год назад

    Thank you for the awesome knowledge watching from New Zealand 🇳🇿

  • @oldfashionedcountrycooking9343
    @oldfashionedcountrycooking9343 Год назад +2

    You have a beautiful garden. Until recently, I had about 30 types of tomatoes. Now I sow 3-4 types because we couldn't eat that much in the season. 🙂

  • @celondelon351
    @celondelon351 Год назад +1

    I grew my first ever tomatoes this year this video came at the perfect time and plucked them as they were turning red as thanks to this video. Thank you so much.

    • @02markcal
      @02markcal Год назад +1

      Celon, Once you have eaten a homegrown tomato, no other tomato but yours will taste as good nor satisfying!

  • @Cheezyjr
    @Cheezyjr Год назад +9

    I had blossom end rot my first year. Tested my soil to see if it was actually calcium deficient. As you said, my soil actually had plenty of calcium. BUT the pH was much higher than recommended for tomatoes (8.5 or so). Which can also interfere with nutrient absorption. I believe higher pH promotes the formation of calcium carbonate which is not bioavailable. I acidified my soil and haven’t had BER since.

    • @Bob_Adkins
      @Bob_Adkins Месяц назад

      Same here. My soil isn't bad at all, 7.0-7.5, but still get BER if I'm not careful. A light sprinkling of sulfur pellets and I get 6.5 and BER is not a problem.

    • @hughjones1460
      @hughjones1460 Месяц назад

      I have been growing tomatoes for 25 years and five years back started growing San Marzano's for sauce making and lost 50% due to Blossom End Rot, something I had never experienced before. There are many reasons this could happen but as I applied regular liquid tomato feed enriched with seaweed, the nutrient problem and soil PH were eliminated. On the following years I kept my eye on making sure there was sufficient watering and that simple act resolved the problem. Cherry tomatoes in containers can be easily taken care off as these containers come with reservoirs that can be filled but tomatoes grown in beds are where BER happens and watering is not monitored as easily.

  • @loisjohnson7272
    @loisjohnson7272 Месяц назад +1

    Wow . Thank you for this information, I learned a lot today from this video, I love growing my own vegetables especially tomatoes! , North Carolina Girl

  • @barbaradoye1989
    @barbaradoye1989 29 дней назад

    Great video! Very good advice! Take care! 😀

  • @DEVUNK88
    @DEVUNK88 Год назад +5

    the best sauce is made from multiple varieties mixed together

  • @Kittyfantastic
    @Kittyfantastic Год назад

    Excellent tips!

  • @josephcarrera3953
    @josephcarrera3953 Год назад

    Awesome information thank you

  • @brianschuster4235
    @brianschuster4235 Год назад

    Hey thank yall so much!

  • @samurphy
    @samurphy Год назад +3

    My personal experience with watering container tomatoes is that, assuming you have well draining soil and good drain holes on the container, you can't really over-water, except in as much as any water that drains out the bottom takes some nutrients with it, so you may strip your soil prematurely if you have a lot of runoff. If you're growing hugelkulture beds, the same applies, with much the same caveats regarding the soil drainage. If the soil is heavy, it's likely to just get mucky and can lead to root rot, but with lots of wood underneath a bed, there's plenty of room for quite a bit of excess water to go without causing a soggy scenario. I water my bucket garden every day, twice a day in high heat, and note from one bucket to the next how much excess runs out the bottom. If it's more than a little dribble, i'll adjust the amount down that I water the rest.

  • @das5842
    @das5842 Год назад

    Great video, thank you!

  • @Minnesotayankee
    @Minnesotayankee 6 дней назад

    This is helpful to know that my instincts were right a lot of times. So many RUclipsrs tell you the reason you’re having this problem one thing and the remedy seems counterintuitive

  • @walkerpantera
    @walkerpantera 8 дней назад

    12:07 he said "I got a big juicy beefsteak" Glorious! 😁 Thank you for the advice. I'm just about to transplant some today, in the rain actually.

  • @MattMilla76
    @MattMilla76 Год назад

    Great video!!

  • @mattdonna9677
    @mattdonna9677 Год назад +3

    I gave up on container gardening due to compaction of soil and the hot sun baking the containers. I do raised beds made of stone borders and it works great. I appreciate your knowledge that you share with us,thank you from southern Indiana.

    • @FlyingSagittarius
      @FlyingSagittarius Год назад +1

      Get a deep saucer and fill it with water. The water will be drawn up through the soil as the plant uses it. In order to prevent water logging, let the saucer and the soil dry out before refilling it.

    • @mattdonna9677
      @mattdonna9677 Год назад

      @@FlyingSagittarius thanks for that, I just find the containers to be more maintenance compared to raised beds.

  • @grwilhelmi
    @grwilhelmi 13 дней назад

    As someone who struggles with blossom rot every year with my tomatoes in my containers this gives me hope! My plants always grew so large healthy looking while keeping half the suckers I could not for the life of me get fruit constantly without losing so much yield to blossom rot. Thinking it was calcium deficiency, infection, or something else entirely over the past few years I'll reassess my watering technique and crush it this year :) Never stop growing!

  • @VT-ix5oh
    @VT-ix5oh Год назад

    Wow, the content keep on comimg,, im an avid gardner and i still learn new things from you all. Thanks

  • @AscendtionArc
    @AscendtionArc Год назад

    Thanks for this.

  • @BrightestBlessings7899
    @BrightestBlessings7899 Год назад

    Excellent video! Thanks fellas. It was kind of blurry. I hope there is not any camera troubles.

  • @timisaac8121
    @timisaac8121 Месяц назад

    Thank You Epic Team: This is the best Tomato Vid ever, anyone that I ever see. Jacques spoke about the "suckers"- Wow. Can you clip suckers and "recycle" or re-grow these in some way? Thanks again. So great you make this useful and timely vid. Best wishes from Sunny Mexico.

  • @angelaanderson5360
    @angelaanderson5360 Год назад +10

    Leaving the stem on the tomato to ripen is a best practice or so I'm told.

  • @carey4490
    @carey4490 Месяц назад

    These tips were fabulous

  • @StarSolaris1122
    @StarSolaris1122 Месяц назад

    This video is awesome and so helpful! My favorite tip was on watering! I really needed to learn this concept! Also I used to keep my tomatoes in the refrigerator and then I read not to… so I stopped. But now I am happy to learn that I can put them back in! I love a chilled tomato 🍅 😄

  • @pennylaur7687
    @pennylaur7687 Год назад +1

    Great info. I was hoping for ideas on blight prevention or treatments since that seems to be a steady issue. Watering from the soil only not spraying, and tried moving to a new spot next year, but am running out of spots to move to. I used a copper fungicide this year but am trying to stay organic.

  • @ekummel
    @ekummel 13 дней назад +1

    I've had some success with an upside down tomato planter. This year I'm growing grape tomatoes because they're easier to eat in a salad...

  • @PorchGardeningWithPassion
    @PorchGardeningWithPassion Месяц назад

    Very interesting things! I was listening while trying a new to me attempt to keep rabbits out of my peas this year.

  • @geoffgorlick790
    @geoffgorlick790 6 дней назад

    Awesome advice 👌🤙

  • @lisag9752
    @lisag9752 Год назад

    A GREAT team video! Question: Should all nightshade veggies be watered like tomatoes and kept consistently moist?

  • @HurairaHerbals
    @HurairaHerbals Год назад

    i'm a container gardener, and was definitely watering twice a day at the height of summer (Houston). Also, I put grocery store tomatoes in the fridge. Harvested tomatoes I keep on the counter. I've never had a problem with putting tomatoes in the fridge.

  • @harambeegardens8705
    @harambeegardens8705 Год назад

    Great info.

  • @johnshopkins554
    @johnshopkins554 Год назад

    This was a really informative vid, maybe one of the best all rounder condensed together. Excellent.
    And the purple buds behind the woman with glasses...what is it plz? I had 3 come up in my garden, the leaves smell kinda like licorice. Thanks.

  • @williamwaters4506
    @williamwaters4506 Месяц назад +2

    I have been a gardener for fifty years, plus I am a master gardener. What amazes me is all the crazy stuff people put in their soil thinking it will improve the vegetable production. Products like epsom salt, rock phosphate, calcium, lime, biochar, fish heads and dozens of other items. People read that tomato plants need calcium so they add a Tums to the soil. As a master gardener I asked people if they ever had their soil tested. Of the thousands of people I talked to at various shows/events no one ever reports getting their soil tested. I had one women tell me she had her soil tested and I thought I was having an auditory hallucination.
    It is the same with people who take all kinds of vitamins/supplements believing they will become immoral and then wind up with liver damage. None of them ever get their urine/blood tested before taking whatever it is that is supposed to make them super healthy.
    The bottom line is that plants need certain nutrients and your soil has or does not have those nutrients. Guessing at what needs to be put in your soil is like guessing what the winning lottery ticket number is.

  • @BigboiiTone
    @BigboiiTone Месяц назад

    Great tips from this and I will continue investigating the fridge myth. I've only done it with storebought ones. (My few homegrown ones are used fresh off the vine!) So maybe those are just bad store tomatoes before they ever leave the store. Grocers in Alaska have no clue how tomatoes should taste regrettably

  • @newlife714
    @newlife714 28 дней назад +4

    We had trouble with birds attacking our tomatoes- so we grabbed some fake plastic snakes from our son’s toy box, and scattered them among our tomato plants and the bird attacks stopped!

  • @mrsleannejh
    @mrsleannejh 10 месяцев назад

    I love this! Team effort, really made me tune in! One negative though, last myth, the video showed the woman watering the tomato leaves!!!