Aerogarden Cherry Tomatoes – Day 80

Just an update. Growing Golden Harvest and Red Heirloom tomatoes in my Aerogarden.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Question by Samantha Morgan(:: How often should you feed vegetables and fruits to guinea pigs?
How often should I feed vegetables to guinea pigs? I use Celery, Carrots, and Cherry tomatoes.
How often should I feed fruits to my guinea pigs? I use cantaloupe, grapes, kiwi, and oranges.

Best answer:

Answer by Be Correct
Some people can feed veggies daily, but they probably worked up to it. If you are just starting to feed them veggies, then do maybe a little bit of veggies once or twice a week. if nothing goes wrong, then after a while of doing that you can increase to 3 days a week, then work your way up slowly to a little bit daily.
Remember, if you ever notice diarrhea, stop feeding the veggies, wait until it has stopped, then start at the very beginning again and stop feeding more than when you get to the day your guinea pig got sick.
If you’re already feeding veggies, then you can just offer fruits as a treat now and then.

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Answering.

What do you think? Answer below!

29 Comments

  1. under a 400 watt hps i can grow 100’s of cherry tomatoes(4 plants) with a couple of hot pepper plants on the side in 30 days or so !

  2. Your hot as hell

  3. Anyone who would like to sell these and make a nice income, drop me a line at lettucegrowtogether (at) g mail dot c o m

  4. you should have transplanted them into pots and placed them outside or just put them directly in the ground outside.

  5. Hi, let me ask you a question did you do smthing to it? Cuz mine grew and grew didn’t give any tomato than it just died :(

  6. That plant has been alive for damn near 2 months and 20 days? if i bought a tomoato plant at the store and planted it during mid-March itll probably die by the beginning of apirl, i like how with the aerogarden theres no work to it just plop the seeds in there and boom tomatos. lol good vid.

  7. less nutrients should solve your burned of leafs…

  8. Its pronounced AIRlooms, not hairlooms.
    English, sadly, isnt a phonetic language.
    The the leaves turning brown could be cause by im gonna say a nitrogen deficiency.

  9. shes cute

  10. I can see that you’ve done 0 research on the subject. There is no point in Arguing with morons. Enjoy your ignorant bliss.

  11. Glad you think so, but growing food in space isn’t only for consumption, but for data. If we know how to grow food in space, we can take 1 step closer to having colonies on other planets other than earth. That is just one of the many reasons why they GROW food in space. Now go back to trolling someone else, dipshit.

  12. You don’t know what the fuck Nasa is doing in space. You’re not up there, and you’re not an astronaut. Now shut the fuck up.

  13. Wrong. Growing food in space is essential. How else do you think they stay healthy? You’re not very smart,huh ;)?

  14. :^)

  15. :0)

  16. H is silent… :-)

  17. I have heard if you cut back the leaves when fruiting starts you will get much more fruit. You have to remove like 25% of the leaves so the plant dosent waist energy growing leaves instead of fruit.

  18. Would you knoe how tall the plants got?

  19. cool.

  20. your right I have grown tomatoes in 28 days with to large plastic storage baskets to hold the resevoir water, one to feed and drain and the other to hold the full strength nutrients, the bottom held 12 gallons of water, I feed it 12 times a day with a timer of cause, the system will drain back into the resevoir, I use a 100 w mh along with red and blue leds for 18 hours a day, the roots love the full strength solution, your cherries tomatoes will grow faster if it has space & all mention aboved.

  21. The brown spots are nute burn I believe, if your still using those crap tablets that come with the AG stop now and head over to amazon and pick up some GrowBig Hydro from Foxfarms. The nutes that come with it are terrible!

  22. you are the cherry.. not that tomatoes :) !

  23. that is so cool! I definitely want to get an aerogarden for those boring non-gardening winter months! :)

  24. I don’t think it’s faster…It took just over 80 days from start to eating. It was kind of cool to have tomatoes in the kitchen though. :)

  25. how long u have to wait before eating??is it a faster method ?

  26. i just read about that a petco and it said to not use veggies or fruits as a daily snack but you can feed it to them occaisonaly.like 2-3 times a week

  27. Vegtables-
    Celery- One 1/4 of a stick, weekly. Very stringy so needs to be chopped up into small pieces to avoid piggy choking
    Carrots- One baby carrot or a small slice of a large carrot, every other day.
    Cherry Tomatoes- One cherry tomato, twice weekly. Remember to remove the poisonous tomato top ( green part ) If it is still on the tomato.

    Fruits-
    Cantaloupe- 1-2 times per week.
    Grapes- One or two, must be seedless, give weekly.
    Kiwi- 1-2 times per week. Give them about 1/4 of the kiwi.
    Oranges- 1-2 times per week. And you can also give them the peel 2-4 times per week.

  28. 2-3 times a week is best. DO NOT feed ice-berg lettuce, this contians pretty much just water and can cause intenstinal problems, carrots, leafy greens like kale, and bits of apple are all good treats. If you guinea pig becomes picky and will only eat the fruits and veggies, stop feeding them and only offer his pellet food.

    Make sure you search the web too to find the right care needed for guinea pigs

  29. If your guinea pig is a baby, give him very small servings until his digestive system gets used to fresh foods. I hear mixed things about oranges, but our guinea pig gets half an orange segment a couple times a week with no problems. Cantalope & kiwi are good sources of Vit C. You’ll know if you’re over-doing it by the consistency of the droppings (sorry if tmi).

    Our vet reccommended that we give our guinea pig a natural source of Vitamin C every day. He gets some bell pepper (his favorite) daily. He gets a couple blueberries almost every day because they’re so nutritious. Less frequently, we give him dark leafy lettuce (never iceberg), dandelion greens, melon, carrot, cilantro, strawberry, fresh mint leaves, broccoli (in very small servings), peach or other fresh food. He used to get grapes but I heard they could be dangerous so I stopped offering them.

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