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Seed Starting Tips for Tomatoes
Here are some tips to starting your own
heirloom tomato seeds and growing the best Tomatoes ever!!! We have found these tips work
well for just about all the heirloom varieties we offer.
Use the following tips for cherry tomatoes, yellow pear, boxcar willie, yellow
brandywine, black krim, mortgage lifter, amish paste, brandywine, beefsteak, costoluto
genovese, caspian pink, and many more heirloom varieties. Some of our most popular
varieties include Green Zebra, Brandywine, Mortgage Lifter, Red Pear, Caspian Pink, Yellow
Pear, Soldacki, San Marzano, Cherokee Purple, White Wonder, Amish Paste, Black Krim, and
Costoluto Genovese.
- Seeds can be started indoors 6-8 weeks before the last anticipated
frost in your growing area. Starting seeds directly outdoors will produce plants but
your yield will be limited.
- Obtain some seed starting mix at the local garden store. Kmart
and Walmart have this available at reasonable prices. The mix should contain
peatmoss to help retain water during seed germination as the seeds should be kept moist
for proper germination.
- If you are starting many varieties of tomatoes or other seedlings, you
should have a separate starting container for each variety. We use 1/2 gallon
cardboard milk/orange juice containers that are cut down their length with the ends
stapled to hold them together. These are a very economical means of separating
seeds. Be sure you mark your containers with seed type. We use a piece of
clear plastic (cut from a milk jug) and put a number on it then have a cross reference
list with the number and variety.
- In a old bowl, bucket, or other container, place some of starting mix
and add water while mixing to moisten the mix.
- Fill the trays with 1-1 1/2" of the moistened seed starting mix
and distribute seeds over surface. Cover seeds with 1/4" of starting mix and
gently firm the surface.
- Check seed trays every 2-3 days to make sure they stay moist. We
cover ours with a loose fitting piece of plastic wrap to help retain water. Seeds
will usually take 10-14 days to germinate (depending upon variety). Once the seeds
have sprouted, they will need a light source. We start our seedlings in our basement
and use fluorescent grow lights which works very well. If you start the seeds on a
window sill make sure you turn the seeds daily to keep them from bending toward the light.
If starting under a grow light, make sure the grow light is within 6" of the
seedlings or they will become tall and leggy. Seedlings need 12-16 hours of light a
day. An inexpensive timer works well to control grow light time. If you use
grow lights, make sure to keep plants within 6" of the light or they will become
leggy.
- Once the seedlings are showing a second set of leaves, it is time to
transplant them from the starting tray to individual pots. We have found that the
best pots are plastic as they retain more water. The peat pots work well if you make
sure to keep them moist...they work great for transplanting as you do not disturb
the root structure of the seedlings. Gently loosen the soil in the starting tray and
separate individual plants. Fill the transplant pot loosely with moistened starter
mix and use a pencil to make a hole in the starting mix. Insert the seedling into
the hole up to the second set of leaves...this may require the slight twisting or bunching
up of the plant's root as they can get pretty long. Gently firm the soil around the
seedling and moisten once you have finished transplanting.
- If you start your seeds very early, you may need to transplant some of
your biggest plants again as they will outgrow their pots. For our healthiest
plants, we transplant them into 1/2 gallon milk containers that have been cut off about
6" from the bottom...these work Great!!!
Transplanting Outdoors
- When it looks like it is time to plant your seedlings outside,
you will need to harden off the plants. This is simply getting them adjusted to the
changing conditions outdoors. When you begin this, make sure the plants are kept in
the shade for the first few days of hardening so they don't get sun-burned. Plants
should be returned inside at night...this seems like a lot of work but it will yield
stronger, healthier plants. Hardening off usually takes 7-10 days.
- When planting your seedlings in the garden, make a shallow trench and
lay the seedling in on its side. Bury the entire plant up to the first set of
leaves,,,all of the stem up to these leaves is capable of producing roots. This will
greatly improve your plants ability to obtain water and nutrients resulting in greater
yields!!
Plant Care in Your Garden
- Once the tomato plants are in your garden they should be watered daily
for the first week. They should be supported as they grow with wooden stakes or
metal cages. We use old nylons cut into strips to tie plants to supports through the
season as they do not bruise the stalks. Many commercial plant ties are also
available.
- Caution!!! Plants are very susceptible when young, to cutworms
which will cut the plant off at the surface of the soil. To avoid these without
chemicals, simply take a piece of aluminum (cut up a pie plate into 2' strips) and fashion
a collar that slips around the plant and gently place in the soil around the stalk.
- Tomato hornworms will more than likely be a problem when your plants
start bearing fruit. They devour the foliage and in some cases even eat new green
tomatoes. The easiest way we have found to get rid of these is to put a bounty out
on them at ten cents a piece and have our kids pick them off. A natural bacteria is
also available in plant stores that works.
Courtesy Tomato Bob
Join Bob's
Heirloom Tomato Growers club
to receive a Free email subscription to the Heirloom Tomato Grower newsletter
and Free trial seeds to evaluate with your first order or simply by sending
us a self addressed stamped envelope...
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