FAQ

GO TO BONNIEPLANTS.COM FOR MORE TIPS ON VEGETABLE AND HERB GARDENING
HOW TO GROW WiTH
FIRST THINGS FIRST. Your plants may arrive dry and thirsty. Give
them a drink, watering until the pot turns dark brown. Keep plants in
a bright spot protected from cold, and plant after the last frost. Follow
planting directions on the pot label or see the video at bonnieplants.com/
growing/growing-tomatoes.
TOMATOES
PLANTING
Tomatoes run on warmth. Plant in late
spring or early summer, after all potential
for the last frost has passed. In zone 10,
tomatoes can be treated as a fall and
winter crop as well.
Find a sunny spot. Tomatoes need at
least 6-8 hours of sun to bring out their best
flavors, and you will need to stake, trellis,
or cage most varieties to keep them off the
ground. Install your supports when you set
out your plants. Space plants at the dis-
tance indicated on the stick tag in the pot.
Prepare the soil. Tomatoes need a
constant supply of nutrients, and take them
up best when the soil pH ranges from
6.2 to 6.8. Add at least 3 to 4 inches of
compost to your beds or containers to help
hold moisture and contribute nutrients to
the soil to be used as needed by the plants.
Plant deeply—very deeply. Plant so
that two-thirds of the stem is buried. This al-
lows roots to sprout along the buried stem,
making your tomato plant stronger and
better able to find water in drought. Note
that tomatoes are the only vegetables that
should be planted this way.
Mulch well and water regularly.
Whether you’re planting in the ground,
raised beds or containers, cover the soil
with 2 to 4 inches of mulch, straw, or
shredded leaves to discourage weeds and
keep the soil evenly moist – the key to
preventing cracked fruits and blossom-end
rot. Water regularly, aiming for an inch
per week (more in hot weather). If desired,
use soaker hoses or drip irrigation to help
maintain even soil moisture.
Try growing in containers. To-
matoes are easy to grow in a pot if you
use a big container (18 to 24 inches in
diameter). Fill it with premium quality pot-
ting mix and mix in some compost. Use a
tomato cage in the pot for taller varieties,
or a stake for smaller patio types. Be sure
to plant deeply and keep the soil moist.
FERTILIZING
Feed regularly with Bonnie Herb, Veg-
etable & Flower Plant Food to keep plants
healthy and vigorous. Your plants will love
the naturally based formula made from
oilseed extract. Apply every 1 to 2 weeks,
following the label directions.
By late summer, plants that began
producing early in the season will show
signs of exhaustion. Coax out new growth
by pruning away withered leaves and
branches. Then follow up with plant food
and treatments for leaf diseases or insects,
if needed.
TROUBLESHOOTING
As summer heats up, some tomato plants
have trouble setting fruit. Be patient, and
you will start seeing little green tomatoes
again when nights begin cooling down.
Meanwhile, promptly harvest ripe tomatoes
to relieve stressed plants of their burdens.
Humid weather creates ideal conditions
for fungal diseases like early blight, which
causes dark spots to form beginning on
lower leaves. Late blight is a more devastat-
ing disease that kills plants quickly. Protect
against it by spraying the leaves with an
approved fungicide such as chlorothalonil
(not organic) or copper (organic)—be sure
to follow label directions—and keeping the
garden clean of plant debris.

Summary of content (2 pages)