15 Fun Ideas for Growing Tomatoes
Grow your own taste-tempting tomatoes and save money on your grocery bill. We show you 15 fun ways to grow and train this popular vegetable.
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Healthy tomato plants may sprawl or grow into vigorous vines. Contain them in a cage or train them to a trellis to keep fruits off the ground and make harvesting easier. Galvanized wire tomato cages are a quick and easy solution. However, they may not be large or sturdy enough to support rampant growth. Check out the rest of the slide show for more great ideas on how to tame your tomatoes.
Add artistic flair to your vegetable garden with spiral tomato stakes. Use the spirals alone or in combination with a wire cage. Wind the main stem of the tomato plant around the rings of the spiral. Secure the stem to the stake with a loose garden twist tie or strip of cloth.
Make your tomato cage serve double duty by wrapping a wire mesh cylinder (rabbit fencing works well) with clear polyethylene. The wire cylinder supports the plant and the plastic wrap acts as a mini greenhouse boosting tomato growth during cool weather. As summer heats up, remove the plastic covering to make harvest easier, improve airflow through the plant's leaves, and reduce disease problems.
Ladderlike cages constructed from 1X2 boards make an attractive way to keep tomato growth well behaved. Use rot-resistant wood such as cedar or redwood. Cut the crosspieces all the same length (14 to 18 inches long, depending on the size of cage you prefer). Make the upright pieces 4 to 5 feet long and insert the bottom 6 to 12 inches into the soil to prevent the towers from toppling in strong winds.
Construct a tepee from 2- to 3-inch diameter saplings or bamboo poles. The tepees shown here use four poles as an outer frame and one pole as a central support. For extra stability the design shown here includes crosspieces attached to opposite poles at two levels.
Attach the main stem of your tomato plant to a single wooden stake with loose twist ties. (This technique also works well for pepper plants.) As the tomato plant grows taller through the season, add more ties to secure the tip to the pole.
Here's a hint: Remove excess side branches by pinching them off at the main stem before they grow 6 inches long.
This wood tomato trellis, reminiscent of an old television aerial, is a great way to add style to your garden. Ten angled arms extend from a central support post. Upright stakes connect the arms for added strength. If you have a home orchard, you can repeat the design by training grape vines, apple trees, or pear trees to a similar shape.
Two wire-mesh panels leaning against each other make a quick-to-assemble support structure for two tomato plants at once. Plant a tomato vine at the base of each panel. Clip or wire the tops together for stability. When it's time to clean up the garden, the panels stack flat, saving on storage space.
Try a twine trellis if you have limited space, such as in this brick raised-bed planter next to a porch. Attach the lower end of the string to a wood stake pounded into the ground. Insert a screw eye into an overhead beam or soffit. Stretch the string tightly between the ground stake and the screw eye. Help the tomato plant climb the twine by tying the main stem to the string.
Decorative pots are ideal for growing tomatoes on a patio, balcony, or deck. If you use a large container, such as a half whiskey barrel almost any type of tomato will work. If you grow plants in a smaller, 10- or 12-inch-diameter pot, select a dwarf variety. 'Patio', 'Window Box Roma Hybrid', and 'Bush Early Girl Hybrid' all grow less than 2 feet tall, and are good choices for containers.
Avoid stooping and bending to tend your tomatoes by growing them in a hanging basket. 'Tumbler Hybrid' is bred especially to hang off a cascading plant, perfect for a hanging basket. Other small varieties suited to growing in containers will drape down, too, once they become laden with fruits.





Twist ties will cut into the plant's stem as it grows. Cut 3-inch strips of old pantyhose and tie them loosely around as the plant grows up the stake or cage. This is a great way to reuse old nylons and keep your plants propped up out of the dirt and away from bugs!
3/20/2011 12:04:56 AM Report Abuse