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Tomatoes In A Hanging Basket ?
Comments
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Hello,
Yes you can,
Tumbler: Plant 2 or 3 to a hanging basket. No need to pinch out side shoots, and water and feed regularly. Cherry sized fruits.
Hope this helps,coffeebean0 -
I give tumbler toms the thumbs up too. I gave a tumbler plant in a pretty pot to a friend with a summer birthday last year, they are so easy to grow - she loved it0
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I regularly grow tumblers in hanging baskets, try to hang them somewhere in the sun with a bit of protection from wind. Mine are, at the moment ,hanging in the summer house, but will be placed outside at the end of May. It's not a good idea to place them near trees or shrubs where birds are nesting as they are fond of free food. I live in the freezing North East, near the coast, so am prepared to bring them indoors over night if the weather is a bit nippy.
Good luck, they taste delicious and I had them going until the end of October last year. Tumblers will also do well in a pot in a sheltered spot. Make sure you use tomato food on them to get a good crop.0 -
I've also been told runner beans and peas can be grown in hanging baskets. I suppose anything that needs support can just hang instead.
BTW, I plant sweet peas to grow up the bean sticks before the beans go in. It's supposed to help with pollination (attracting more bees etc.) and gives the beans something to hang on to. Tried it last year - not convinced it made a big difference but I love sweet peas and it all looked (and smelled) lovely whwn they flowered.0 -
Pop some nastursiam seeds in your hanging basket with the Tumbler Toms ... looks pretty and they are edible too~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
PMS Pot: £57.53 Pigsback Pot: £23.00
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Queenie wrote:Pop some nastursiam seeds in your hanging basket with the Tumbler Toms ... looks pretty and they are edible too
I always get black fly on my nastursiums then no-one wants to eat them. Any tips?0 -
Bossyboots wrote:I always get black fly on my nastursiums then no-one wants to eat them. Any tips?
Tell them they are poppy seeds?
I squirt "things" with washing up water, (recyling) and that does tend to reduce the amount of "things" on my plants.
(Last year my marigolds were smothered! They didn't reckon on Queenie and her squirter *insert evil 'hehehe'* )
I get a cabbage white butterflied on my nastursiums and I think that helps keep the things down - other than that, I just give them a wash.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
PMS Pot: £57.53 Pigsback Pot: £23.00
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I grow nastursiums to encourage black fly and keep them off my veg! Same for marigolds,not my favourite flower but I have them all round the tomatoes because they're supposed to keep aphids away.0
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We grow tomatoes in tubs in the garden, and got a brilliant crop the last couple of years. So you don't necessarily need a greenhouse.
We get the Moneymaker variety as they are dead easy and go on for ages producing fruit.
If you have a sunny spot in the garden, give it a go. Start with just one plant if you are stuck for space - you'll get enough for several salads throughout the season!I haven't bogged off yet, and I ain't no babe
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Hi Bogoff_babe,
Do i need to support my tomato plants with canes or anything if i grow them in a tub. And can i grow them straight in the garden.
I have seen Money Maker tomato plants for sale three plants for a pound they are about 6 inches high are these the kind that you use?
Thanks for all your help.0
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