[Ag-eq] Garden

Nella Foster jellybeanfarm at gmail.com
Wed Sep 28 14:59:41 UTC 2016


Tracy I've never heard of doing that with a tomato cutting, but it sounds
like a good idea.  I will be interested to hear how it does for you.

Nella

-----Original Message-----
From: Ag-eq [mailto:ag-eq-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Tracy Carcione
via Ag-eq
Sent: Sunday, September 25, 2016 9:57 AM
To: 'Agricultural and Equestrean Division List'
Cc: Tracy Carcione
Subject: Re: [Ag-eq] Garden

I am trying an experiment.  I read somewhere it's easy to basically clone a
tomato by taking a cutting and keeping it alive over winter to plant next
spring.  It's real easy to root tomato cuttings, so I'm giving it a try,
just for the heck of it.

I was listening to the Garden Fork podcast this morning, and they had some
interesting things to say.  One was that they grew tomatoes through a fabric
groundcover with holes cut in just big enough for the plant.  They put drip
hoses on top of the cover (or the hoses could go underneath, whichever you
like).  The guy said he didn't get any wilt, because the leaves never
touched soil, where the wilts live.

They also said you can protect from squash borers or cabbage worm by using a
floating row cover, with soil holding it down all around.  Cover the plants
until they're ready to flower, and that keeps the butterflies from laying
eggs on them that turn into caterpillars.
Tracy



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