Transplant Heirloom Tomato Plants To Peat Pots – Garden Journal Update

Transplant Heirloom Tomato Plants To Peat Pots - Garden Journal Update

How to transplant heirloom tomatoes to peat pots. These tomatoes are growing up fast and outgrowing the little peat disks that come in those 72 cell mini gre…

Question by Maria Garcia: There Are 75 Tomato plants to a flat if there are 68 flats, find the total number of tomato plants?
There Are 75 Tomato plants to a flat if there are 68 flats, find the total number of tomato plants?
This questions is really confusing to me =/
Try and help me please. [:

Best answer:

Answer by catsangel_707
75 x 68=5100 plants.

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25 Comments

  1. I’m waiting until after May 25 to plant them in the garden, in hopes that we won’t have any more frost. Based on the forecast I could probably transplant them now though.

  2. When will you plant them into your garden?

  3. Thanks! My peat pots always break down and the roots go right through them. I was surprised to read that others don’t have these results and peat pots not breaking down.

  4. Thanks!

  5. thanks Mr. Rivet.

  6. those plants need some serious rehabilitation.i have made the mistake of using peat pots in the past best to peel them off before planting in their final positions.

  7. Thats the right way…just sit and wait see it grow :-)

  8. Yes, real good advice. If you can’t take off the mesh bag, then at least tear it or slit it on 2 sides. Will help root expansion exponentially. Thanks for sharing~!

  9. Nice list! Most I That’s the way to do it. Save seeds from good ones. I mainly plant Black Krim and Cherokee Purple in the heirlooms. Plant the Better Boy and Lemon Boy. Used to plant Big Boy and liked them but lately they seem to be hit by early blight for me. Just got my plants in the ground yesterday. I use fish emulsion and that’s about it. Used to catch carp and plant them in the garden along with the plants and got amazing results. Will be interested to see how you do this year! Good Luck!

  10. Grosse Lisse, Indian stripe, Garden peach, Thessaloniki, Druzba, Rozovyi gigant, Black cherry, Yellow riesenstraube, Tommy toe, Black prince, Wes, Amish paste, Better boy, and Beefsteak of some sort. I’m also growing a small to medium size, smooth, round, sweet, red fruit from last year. I have no idea what it is because all I planted last year was Amish paste, better boy and beefsteak.

    I’ll be saving seeds from all the tomatoes that do good.

  11. Great! What varieties do you plant? I have some favorite heirloom ones I like. I also plant some local varieties that are reliable here in South Pennsylvania.

  12. thanks,

    I put a link to the fertilizer recipe in the video description, basically Epsom salt, fish emulsion and potting soil. The tomato list is long, but thessaloniki, garden peach, black cherry and Wes are a few I can’t wait to see and try. Druzba and Rozovyi gigant sound interesting too.

  13. What is this, an auction? I bid 20. :) I’ll try and do a vid when I plant them in the garden.

  14. Vid opps :)

  15. Good advice when you plant them out into you garden pls make a bid cos I never planted toms out before :)

  16. Awesome vid very important about the air pockets ! So true , just be careful on the ph lvl on the nutrient solution but dunking like that is highly benificial is it a guano ? I didn’t hear you say anything about it . I love heirlooms grown then sevral times what varieties do you have there?

  17. Thanks! I’m saving newspaper for next year’s pots.

  18. I’m all set on spinach and chives. thanks! I’d like some currant bushes but nowhere to grow them. Hope the rabbits don’t get you tomatoes.

  19. Did you say before that you got the same plot of land this year? I have new zealand spinach seeds if you need some. Also. lots of currant bushes that need homes. Chives too come to think of it. I just put out some of my tomatoes today and am hoping the rabbits don’t eat them. They’ve already got all my peas and some of my cabbages. Stupid rabbits!

  20. Yes it’s best to remove the mesh and even better transplant every stage as deep as posible. Instead of peat pots try making paper ones and you will save a whole bunch.

  21. Thanks Ken! I need to stop over, to your channel, :) and see what you’ve been up to.

  22. Thanks,

    I’ll probably be giving a bunch of the tomatoes and peppers away to the local food bank. I thought about setting up a fruit stand if the plants do really well. Peppers and tomatoes are the more expensive veggies to buy in the store or at the farmer’s market, so that’s why I grow a bunch.

  23. My only real problems growing plants or seeds came when I left air pockets in the soil. I don’t pack it down hard, but make sure and get all those air pockets out. My garden got messed up a bit last year when a mole kept coming through making tunnels, air pockets, underneath all the new growth. Some plants actually disappeared into mole hell when the rains came never to be seen again. LOL

  24. Check out 420homestead, he is in a desert and growing veggies and other plants too. I don’t know what it would be like to live in a place without water as I’ve been surrounded by the largest freshwater bodies of water in the world the majority of my life, the Great Lakes. I’m really impressed to see folks in arid climates and deserts gardening.

  25. 75*68=5100 plants

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