Organic Tomato Gardening For Healthier Eating

November 14th, 2007    Subscribe To Our Feed

Growing Organic Tomatoes

For organic gardeners, the use of pesticides and chemicals is not an option as they look to nature to provide everything needed to help their garden grow. A rain forest is a prime example of how organic farming can use all that nature provides to produce taste and nutrition in every plant. Organic tomato gardening is a fairly recent endeavor as more people understand the harm that can be done to their health - as well as to the natural order of living things - by using chemicals.

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Organic farming is the practice of using no chemicals in fertilizers or pesticides and keeping the soil free of such items. A buffer zone around the garden can prevent the inadvertent exposure to chemicals and help maintain organic tomato gardening in its purest form. Research has proven that nature has its own way of dealing with all living things, and for every insect that may eat the plant or destroy the fruit, there is another creature that uses those insects for food.

grow great tomatoesMany of the bugs that people believe are eating their vegetable plants are often mistaking a good bug for the bad one they are going after. The process of organic tomato gardening is just that, a practice not a sudden notion.

Deciding to practice organic tomato gardening is just the first step in the organic process. There may be chemicals in the soil from previous uses that will remain in the ground for years. In some cases before a commercial plot can be deemed organic, there is a 10 to 20 years period during which no chemical can be used. For most home gardens the wait probably will not be very long, as hopefully few chemicals have been used previously.

Natural compost and a layer of organic fertilizer such as leaves or grass clippings can be turned over in the garden in the fall and will supply nutrition for organic tomato gardening in the spring. While most pests will have natural predators, spraying plants with a garlic juice and water mixture can help fend off some of the more persistent creatures.

One of the biggest advantages of organic tomato gardening is that tomatoes can be plucked from the plant and eaten on the spot without worry of what is on the fruit and the potential side effects of ingesting unwanted chemicals. A healthy crop packed with nutrients and flavor will result from organic tomato gardening.


How To Grow Organic Tomatoes

September 24th, 2007    Subscribe To Our Feed

Tips for growing organic tomatoes filled with flavor and natural goodness

Organic gardening is often thought of as the preserve of eccentrics who refuse to accept the self-evident truth that twentieth-century progress has transformed the ancient art of gardening. Why fiddle around with compost and garlic spray when modern fertilizers and insecticides are so much more efficient and easier to use?

Opinion has changed and now most gardeners regard organic as the most sensible way to garden as the benefits of twentieth-century technology have come at a price. Chemical sprays and fertilizers have done much damage to the environment. We might not think that we can do much to change the world, but we can take sensible care of the one part of the environment we control: our own garden. And by doing so, we do make a difference, particularly when you add up all the home gardens in the country - and indeed the world - they represent a fair chunk of our environment.

Organic gardening is simply the application of common sense such as people have been practising for centuries. Growing organic tomatoes follow the same principles. It involves digging manure into a planting bed, putting kitchen scraps onto a compost heap, using blood and bone on your tomatoes instead of sulphate of ammonia. There is much satisfaction to be gained from spreading a rich compost you have made yourself rather than a bag of chemical fertilizer. You know that it will benefit not just the immediate growth of your plants, but the health of your soil for years to come. You are working with nature in harmony with her own rhythms.

Tomatoes love lots of compost and manure. Ideally this should be dug into your site at least eight weeks prior to planting to give it time to break down and give good texture to your soil. Time is also required for the nutrients in the compost or manure to be released.

To grow organic tomatoes, spread your compost and fork it in to mix with the soil when preparing a new tomato bed. Around established tomato plants spread in onto the surface as mulch. As it decomposes it will sift down into the soil and the worms will come up and take it down with them.