Tomato seedlings all fell over
Chris
4 years ago
last modified: 3 years ago
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Chris
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Nine foot Euphorbia fell over! How do I keep it up?
Comments (23)Most importantly is the plant inside against the wall all the time? This Euphorbia Ammak is a large growing tree and needs bright sunlight to maintain itself. Soil looks to be dry but they should be in a gritter mix to increase drainage. Is the brown spots mussy or soft, and/or smells funny. It is possible that it is still okay. Needs better living conditions. Turning brown or black is sometimes part of growing this white ammak. If you must cut, Use a sharp knife and cut across where there is no rot and only good stem. Have a spray bottle of cold water to spray the white latex sap. Sap is toxic and a skin irritant and wash right after cutting it. If you get any in your eyes, wash out with tons of water then go to the hospital for treatment. Let the cut heal and dry for a few days before planting in pure grit or perlite. It takes almost a year for new roots to form. No water can be taken up till it grows new roots. Google 'cutting my euphorbia ammak' for videos and more instructions....See Moreoops, fell in love again....(another double seedling)
Comments (7)Hahahaha, deangreen. Of course you are keeping it. It's lovely! Doubles are hard to cross, I know. I've tried and got a few but only a couple of keepers.. Good job! Ellie...See MoreAll my Roma's leaves fell off!! Help!!
Comments (2)I would be interested if you get some good answers here. I do know that a lot of plants do not live if they lose their leaves but maybe the Roma will. I live in Western NC and have had a lot of problems here between the wind, the rain and an unexpected cold night in between. My husky cherry tomatoes and romas hung upside down in plastic buckets (5 gallon with a handle) are having a problem with brown leaves. I cannot tell if I overwatered or didn't water enough. Also, the sun does not directly hit them. Used Miracle Gro organic soil. Maybe someone will answer all our questions. Good luck....See MoreWhy did ALL of my tomato plants fall over?
Comments (11)I searched "tomatoes fell over" in Google and this page came up first. Just so happens I'm a member! Ha. As for the original post, sometimes tomatoes will shoot up tall and straight, but they are always going to flop sooner or later so that's why you go ahead and stake them in some manner. I plant mine in straight rows with wire (cheap roll of small gauge flexible wire you can get at Home Depot, etc.) on either side (parallel) of landscape timbers spaced every six or eight feet. The wires start a couple of feet from the ground and I run three or four courses up to five or six feet high. As the maters grow I make sure they stay between the wires and later on use panty hose as necessary to train the errant limbs. (For better results pinch off the vines closest to the bottom as they sprout.) But I came here to regarding seedlings in particular. They flop too and when they do it's game over. When I first started growing my tomato plants I used a grow light. Then, later when I started buying at the store I forgot all of that. When I decided to grow again all my plants fell over. It nearly drove me crazy! The reason was that I wasn't using a light. (It only took me three seasons to re-figger out the light angle! Dumb dumb dumb!) The moment the seedlings erupt you need to put them in the sun when possible and under a light of some kind at night. I use a couple of florescent lights.set near to the tops of the new growth seedlings. You do this and they won't flop over. Don't and they will, guaranteed. There can be other causes for flop, most going back to careless gardening habits. But one is sneaky for the beginner. You must never ever use old moldy growing medium...You know, the half bag you had left over from last year that has fuzz on top this year. That kind of soil will kill baby plants in about a half of a wink. Use fresh, or bake the old stuff, or just be darned sure your leftover hasn't gone over. Hope this helps. Mystery solved for floppy stringy, tall, dead tomato seedlings. Give 'em the light light light! All day and all night! Your tomato growing pal, Norm This post was edited by TheNorm on Sat, Jan 31, 15 at 14:30...See Morefloral_uk z.8/9 SW UK
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