Any idea what damaged my new tomato ?
Lisa 8b
8 years ago
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Lisa 8b
8 years agoRelated Discussions
Tomato Early Blight, aphid damage, or heat damage? HELP !
Comments (2)I've been feeding them with compost tea when I water twice each day. Like most tap water, mine has a a fairly high pH, so minerals may not be as available to the plants as they should be. I try to avoid all toxic stuff, but I do use non-organic fertilizers when my compost for tea is either used up or washed out. I mainly compost maple tree leaves and grass clippings that I bag with the mower each fall. I gave the plants dose of Epson salts and bought a small package of Miracid fertilizer with trace elements. I'm going to try adding a small bit of this each day with their water to lower the pH and supplement their feed now that I am running out of compost that is not already washed out. The rate of leaves dying has slowed down a bit, so it looks like the plant might survive to give me a fall crop after the weather cools down a bit. I am not sure if the improvement is because our temp for the past week has finally dropped from over 100 to the high 80s. It may also be that the sick leaves are the left over ones from before I got rid of the last few aphids and mites. I cannot find a single aphid or mite anymore. It cannot tell for sure which growth on the plant as emerged since the final bugs were beaten. I did take some of the leaves and hold them up to a flash light last night to see if there were any pin-holes. The leaves that have any yellow all seem to have some tiny holes that light would shine through, but the newer mature leaves do not have any holes or yellow. Thank you for the suggestion regarding the magnesium. Between the Epson Salts, more balanced pH, lower temp, and beneficial bugs, I hope somethings works. If I can get this problem with leave drop fixed, I think I can get a good fall crop. The plant's basic stems and roots seem to still be very healthy and there is enough new growth with leaves to still produce a good crop once our night temps drop back below 70 so my blooms will set fruit. Knoxville is near the mountains, but down in river valley, so our cool fall temps are moderated. Last year, I was able to cover my plants with a sheet at night for the first 3 or 4 frosts, and then we got a warm spell without more frost until mid November. After I gave up and picked the green fruit before our first really cold night, I had ripe tomatoes until nearly Christmas. Between tress and my 4 dogs which love to dig, I had a hard time finding a good place to grow a couple of tomato plants, so I've grown 2 or 3 in pots for the past few years. I read about the Topsy-Turvey tomato planters that a local man had invented, so I decided to try the idea 2 years ago. For anyone that wants to grow tomatoes next year in a container, I recommend the idea highly. I don't have to stake them and the plants are clean and dry up off the ground. I'm disabled and living on social security, so I try to make do with things I can scavenge whenever possible. For my planters, I use a 5 or 10 gallon bucket. I tied a strong nylon rope around the top of the buckets, because I did not trust the handles to be strong enough to support both the bucket's contents and the plant's growth. I drilled a 2 inch hole in the center of the bottom of the buckets. When I transplant my seedlings, I sit the bucket right-side-up on the edge of a table with part hanging over the edge so I can get to the hole in the bottom. I slide the plant's roots up from the bottom through the hole in the bucket and then wedged soft sponge-like foam around the plant's stem to keep it from falling out and keep the dirt from running out when I add it next. After the tomato plant is in the hole with its foam collar, I reach in the top of the bucket and pull the plant's roots and stem up into the bucket until only the top stems and leaves of the plant are hanging out of the bottom of the bucket. I then add enough dirt to hold the plant in position. Pause before adding so much dirt that the bucket gets too heavy to lift up to hang. Warning, this thing will get heavy, so a simple cup hook screwed into the overhang will not be enough to hold it once you get it full of dirt, watered, with several feet of foliage. While it is somewhat clumsy to put together, if you have a place to hang it that gets lots of sun, it works great. I was lucky in that someone in the past had already put up a mounting for a swing on the porch. The porch is so sunny, it lends itself better for container gardening than it does for a porch swing, so I use the heavy hooks intended for a porch swing with two adults, to instead support large hanging tomato plants. After I have the pots hanging, I then finish filling the buckets with a mixture of compost and potting mix. I use fresh potting mix each year and wash the buckets with bleach each spring to avoid soil borne diseases and pests from the prior year. In full sun and heat, I water the plants each morning and afternoon. As the stems grow, they will tend to curve back upward in graceful "swooping" arcs that almost hide the bucket they are growing in. Once the plants are heavy with full-sized fruit they will hang more straight, so try to put the pot as high as you can, and still be able to reach up to water it from the top. Cherry tomatoes plants make a very beautiful hanging plant when grown this way. The graceful arcs of lush green leaves are accented so well by the clusters of ripe fruit, you would be tempted to leave then on the plant for decoration, if they weren't so tasty. They are so good, that many of them never even make it inside the house, because I cannot resist picking a few to eat fresh from the vine, every time I go outside and walk past them. While they don't produce bragging sized fruit, I always plant a cherry tomato plant because they are so predictably productive. For me, they always seem to be the most disease and pest resistant and best at continuing to set fruit during the hot summer. Greg...See MoreAny ideas for my new deck (see my ugly deck here)
Comments (9)If your looking to not add on and just make it nice, I would: Resurface the cement or cover with some kind of tile mosiac. repair lattice and landscape around it to cover it. Wood if decent I'd restore and reseal, but build new railing wither with metal balusters or bench/planter. I can't see the rest of the yard nor what your budget is so its hard to say. It just looks like it needs some TLC which the above would not cost too much. Me, I went IPE and doubled size to 700 feet and droped a 500 gallon Hot Springs hot tub and had a custom wrought Iron rail made at 100 feet. I started off as a $4000 budget job but grew into a monster of a project long leaving that budget! The imagination is limitless but everyone has a budget! Good luck!...See MoreAny Ideas on whats up with my Tomato plant leaves ?
Comments (10)Okay. Caterpillars are easy, but neem doesn't work so great against them. Get some BtK (Bacillus thuringienisis var. kurstaki). Don't know about brands in your part of the world, but it's very common. Over here, it goes by names like Caterpillar Killer, Dipel, Thuricide, etc. and comes in both liquid and dust form. That will take care of them, if you're sure they're caterpillars (I can't see the caterpillars at the photo resolution available). Bt is very specific in what it kills, and it only kills lepidopteran larvae, i.e., larvae of butterflies and moths. If it's not caterpillars, it won't do anything. Which is good news for pollinators and beneficial predator bugs. The caterpillars have to eat the Bt. It works by attacking their gut once they ingest it. It's not a contact poison. So be sure to spray/dust all surfaces of the plant and both tops and undersides of leaves. It won't burn your plants if you apply in the day, but UV will inactivate it fairly quickly, so spraying in the late afternoon/evening is best, especially since a lot of caterpillars feed more actively at night. Good luck!...See MoreFaint straight line on my new quartz island. Any idea what it is?
Comments (40)Update: I stopped at the kitchen cabinet maker today. It's a well known and reputable company in my area. I picked my counter top sample actually in his showroom. The counters were ordered through him. He already knew about the mark and that they were coming today to try and fix it. I showed him before and after photos. I explained when you walk right around the perimeter of the kitchen island you don't really see it so I thought it was fine when they left.......BUT the reason is because they dulled the finish. When you enter the room and you aren't standing right at the counter you can see the dull spot. The owner of the cabinet company has been in the business over 35 years and I trust his advice. I'm just not sure if it will matter to me as much in a few weeks as it does today.... He told me I can wait to decide. He sent my photos over to the counter top company so it's documented. He said in a month from now once I am using my kitchen (and my pendant lights are in) if it's still bothering me we will address it. He also said he does a large amount of business with them (about 100k per month) so he will make sure that they make it right if I choose to revisit the issue. So glad I went with this company. Love the owner. He's great to work with....See Moredigdirt2
8 years agoJean
8 years agoLisa 8b
8 years agolast modified: 8 years agoUser
8 years agoJean
8 years agoBarrie, (Central PA, zone 6a)
8 years agoLisa 8b
8 years ago
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