Ha! No such thing.
But if you want to be sure you dont buy something like this:
Grandiflora I forgot the name of
And wind up with something like this:
Dr. Huey, an uninvited visitor
Be sure the roses you buy are ...
Ha! No such thing.
But if you want to be sure you dont buy something like this:
Grandiflora I forgot the name of
And wind up with something like this:
Dr. Huey, an uninvited visitor
Be sure the roses you buy are ...
There have always been two good reasons to grow your own tomatoes: they taste much better than the mass-market kind and they're much cheaper than equally tasty local tomatoes from the farmstand or greenmarket. Now we can add reason three: they're safe.
Unless you have spent the last month in complete isolation, you know the dark underbelly of industrial agriculture has once again rolled to the surface. Every hamburger is a scary roll of the health dice, this time because of tainted tomatoes.
Why are we not surprised?
Fortunately, raising your own tomatoes is a lot easier than raising your own beef cattle. In fact, tomatoes are among the very easiest vegetables to grow.
Picnic-ready heirloom tomatoes; the green ones are ripe Aunt Ruby's German Green.
Tomatoes are not only easy, they're productive -- 6 or 8 plants (in the front yard, if need be) can supply all the fresh tomatoes a family of 4 could want, with enough extra to preserve for winter. And if your garden is the container kind, a single Sungold or Sweet Million in a half whiskey barrel will give you what does seem like a million delicious cherry tomatoes.
Although planting time is fast passing, it's not too late to get growing your own in most parts of the country. Garden centers still have seedlings and tomatoes are such tough plants that even skinny pot bound disasters will usually do fine, eventually.
You know how it goes: take a quick trip to the garden center to get a new pair of gloves or another bag of compost, and the next thing you know you're wandering down the aisles, drawn by that patchwork carpet of bright colors, each teeny plant in its tiny cell putting out flowers that call, "buy me, buy me, buy ME!"
It can be hard to ignore them, but it's better to buy seedlings that are still more potential than performance, stocky little guys with multiple stems, healthy-looking leaves and few flower buds or none at all. And when I say little I do mean little.
Here are 2 mantras to chant when confronted by all those blossoms:
1." Roots, Roots, Roots." These are the most important part of the plant, and there's not much room in those potlets. With constant water and fertilizer an annual can grow 8, 10 inches - I've seen 'em two feet-tall in a pot the size of an ice cube, but that plant is going to have major adjustment problems when it moves into the garden. If roots are coming out of the bottom, that's a good sign they're too crowded inside for the seedlings to be a good buy.
2. "Don't Forget the Slow Starters." Impulse buying being what it is, nurseries seldom give starring positions to plants that are not in bloom. But that means you have to look carefully to find the interesting stuff: tall growing plants, plants that make long stems for cutting, and plants that do not bloom until late. Go for the green and check the labels. Instead of ho-hum dwarf cosmos, you might find the comparatively new and quite dandy:
Double Click cosmos