Allotments 4 All

Produce => Edible Plants => Topic started by: sarah on April 09, 2006, 11:49:18

Title: tomato head
Post by: sarah on April 09, 2006, 11:49:18
about ten days ago i potted up my tomatoes and planted them deep (up to the seed leaves) which I believe is the corect thing to do. The next day I potted on my brassicas, red cabbage, ps broccolli and ...something else cant remember, anyway, I still had my tomato head on and as they were rather leggy I planted them all quite a bit deeper than they originally were.  They seem to have stopped growing altogether now.  ::) ???. have I done a silly thing or will they be ok?
Title: Re: tomato head
Post by: redimp on April 09, 2006, 11:57:47
You did right with the brassicas.  They should always be potted on or planted out to first leaf.  Gives them more stability which they all crave.

Don't know whay they have stopped though (although they will stop anyway for one or two days after potting on).  Have any other conditions changed.  If they have got colder, they may well have just slowed down.  Anyway, they should get going at some point.

Also, see here: Seed leaf question in Basics. (http://www.allotments4all.co.uk/joomla/component/option,com_smf/Itemid,28/topic,18576.msg114157#new)
Title: Re: tomato head
Post by: John_H on April 09, 2006, 12:53:48
I always plant my brassica deep.

When I get around to finally planting my sprout and broccoli transplants, I will put them in dips the shape of half a football. I treat them a bit like leeks and slowly fill the dip in then finally heap them up  as they grow during the autumn.

The dips make it easier to water, help the plants stay out of the wind and make it slighly easier to shade or net them  against cabbage butterfly over the summer.
Title: Re: tomato head
Post by: supersprout on April 09, 2006, 13:14:16
Hi sarah, tomatoes grow roots from their stems below the first seed leaf. If they get leggy you can even plant them sideways so long as the first leaves are above the ground, and they will root. Amazing ain't it? If you think have slower growth, it may be the shock of transplanting, or the optical illusion of a bigger pot/smaller plant, or too wet? ::) Ignore them for a bit and see what happens. I have had to be away for a week at a time recently, and it's done my baby plants a power of good to be, erm, left alone :-[.
Title: Re: tomato head
Post by: grawrc on April 09, 2006, 13:17:22
Thanks for this advice. I'm about to pot on my toms but they're in paper pots so I'm potting them directly into the bigger ones rather than taking them out and potting them on. Hope they won't even notice.
Title: Re: tomato head
Post by: sarah on April 09, 2006, 18:33:17
thanks for the replies, I feel muchly reassured now.  :)
Title: Re: tomato head
Post by: supersprout on April 09, 2006, 18:35:49
Quote from: John_H on April 09, 2006, 12:53:48
The dips make it easier to water, help the plants stay out of the wind and make it slighly easier to shade or net them  against cabbage butterfly over the summer.

That's great advice john, my brassica pushed up the nets early on, planting in dips should give them a few more weeks under cover. Thank you!