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Vegetables in the Sustainable Garden
Tomato Reruns
By the end of summer, our tomato patch is usually pretty ragged-looking due to t
he ravages of insects, mites, and diseases. It's also stopped setting fruit due
to the heat of summer. However, fall is coming and with it comes a fresh new
start on the vegetable garden.
New tomato transplants are often difficult to find in July and August but there's
no need to go out shopping for new ones. You can revive your old patch for fall
tomato rerun. There are two basic ways to do this.
Rejuvenating Tired Tomatoes
The first method is to cut back the old plants to force them to resprout and
thus regrow a new set of vines for fall. This can be a bit tricky, and I've
killed vines by cutting them back too far in the blazing heat. The plants need
to be well watered and not too stressed, and you'll want to allow some green
growth to remain after cutting them back.
My preferred method of reviving an old tomato patch is by tip layering the old
plants. Take a long section of vine that can reach all the way to the ground.
Remove the leaves from the last foot or so except for a half dozen leaves on
the very end of the vine. Use a shovel to scoop out a little hole in the ground
where you want the new vine to grow, usually in between two older plants.
It doesn't have to be very deep, just a few inches is enough.
Lay the end of the vine in the hole, leaving the tip with leaves to stick up
out of the hole. Then fill the hole with soil and water it in well. Continue
to water as needed to keep that spot moist. Tomatoes love to root along the
vine and within a couple of weeks you'll see roots starting to grow into the
ground. After about three weeks this new daughter plant will be ready to take
off on its own.
At that point you just cut its connection to the mother plant, and your new
star will be ready to go for fall. Then remove the mother plant along with all
its mites and diseased leaves. Be aware that there will be plenty of mites and
other pests ready to focus their hungry attention on the small, new tomato
plants, so take care to protect them with sprays of insecticidal soap or a blast
of water directed upward from beneath the foliage.
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