This is a public-interest archive. Personal data is pseudonymized and retained under
GDPR Article 89.
Re: Tomato question
- To: v*@eskimo.com
- Subject: Re: Tomato question
- From: L* H* <l*@hafey.org>
- Date: Sun, 19 Jul 1998 08:53:18 +1000
- References: <199807181337.GAA04946@scaup.prod.itd.earthlink.net>
- Resent-Date: Sat, 18 Jul 1998 15:57:25 -0700 (PDT)
- Resent-From: veggie-list@eskimo.com
- Resent-Message-ID: <"cGo012.0.FI.KXIir"@mx2>
- Resent-Sender: veggie-list-request@eskimo.com
Hi Michelle!
I transplanted some "volunteer" tomatoes, and had about a 75% success rate.
One I thought was dead sprang back to life with so much vigour that it's now
bigger than the ones I grew purposely in the ground. On the other hand, I
transplanted some other volunteers and they all threw up their roots and
died. I guess it depends on how many you have, how big they are (the second
lot of volunteers were pretty tiny - I really should have known better,
while the first lot were about 15 cm high - dunno what that is in inches,
I'm in Australia, we only use metric), and to make sure you water them in
properly and keep an eagle eye on them! Good luck, hope this helps some!
Lisa
Gareth Bramley wrote:
> Hi peoples,
>
> Well, i went and planted my matoes too close together. Can I safely move
> them?
>
> Michelle
Other Mailing lists |
Author Index |
Date Index |
Subject Index |
Thread Index