I appreciate the effort of presenting this video. I agree that greenhouse has the extreme benefit of being able to shade tomatoes from direct sunlight and it is the best place to grow tomatoes. Furthermore, I will build my own greenhouse too for my edible plants.
Thanks for the great video. Good tips which I will take on board. My plants have yellow leaves which I believe is too much water, is that correct? Willie (Glasgow)
The still get pollinated by insects and plant movement if the vents are open, also you can help them by tapping the plants around mid day or even coarse watering overhead on a warm day as long as they dry out by evening, do not do this in the autumn.
What sort of temperature do you need in the greenhouse ideally? Can it get TOO hot for tomatoes? Is it more important to have it hot or steam free? or a balance of both?
Thanks so much for this excellent video Clive (subbed and liked). I am living in Dublin, where we obviously have a similar climate to the UK, with limited sunshine during our growing season. Therefore, I'm very keen to get my tomatoes going as early as possible. May I please ask your advice on what is the earliest that young tomato plants can be safely put in a cold frame after starting under fluorescent grow lights? I am just starting using a cold frame, so I don't have any feel for how effective they are for protecting against frost damage. Thanks again (sorry for the long comment).
my tomatoe vines are growing in a greenhouse great. but i have no tomatoes yet. there are flowers but no tomatoe? is it still too early? or i worry if bees germinate, but if they cant get in?
Hi. I bought tomato and cherry tomato seeds from B’n’Q and Homebase. I’ve planted them and they’re growing nicely, although no flowers yet. My question is. I do not know whether they are determínate or indeterminate. Is there a way of knowing what they are, by say looking at the plant?
Lovely video, thank you! I know this was filmed a long time ago, but did you discover that variety of Tomato it is that you show us at the end of your video? Many thanks!
19 Comments
Hello, Mr. Groves,
Congratulations, is beautiful gardening…
I appreciate the effort of presenting this video. I agree that greenhouse has the extreme benefit of being able to shade tomatoes from direct sunlight and it is the best place to grow tomatoes. Furthermore, I will build my own greenhouse too for my edible plants.
Thank you for the interesting video Mr Groves. Some great tips there.
Thank you, looking forward to more videos like this, peppers?….
Thanks for the great video. Good tips which I will take on board. My plants have yellow leaves which I believe is too much water, is that correct?
Willie (Glasgow)
How do the plants get pollinated in a green house?
The still get pollinated by insects and plant movement if the vents are open, also you can help them by tapping the plants around mid day or even coarse watering overhead on a warm day as long as they dry out by evening, do not do this in the autumn.
Thanks, very helpfull.
What sort of temperature do you need in the greenhouse ideally? Can it get TOO hot for tomatoes? Is it more important to have it hot or steam free? or a balance of both?
Thanks so much for this excellent video Clive (subbed and liked). I am living in Dublin, where we obviously have a similar climate to the UK, with limited sunshine during our growing season. Therefore, I'm very keen to get my tomatoes going as early as possible. May I please ask your advice on what is the earliest that young tomato plants can be safely put in a cold frame after starting under fluorescent grow lights? I am just starting using a cold frame, so I don't have any feel for how effective they are for protecting against frost damage. Thanks again (sorry for the long comment).
my tomatoe vines are growing in a greenhouse great. but i have no tomatoes yet. there are flowers but no tomatoe?
is it still too early?
or
i worry if bees germinate, but if they cant get in?
Very good cheers
Hi. I bought tomato and cherry tomato seeds from B’n’Q and Homebase. I’ve planted them and they’re growing nicely, although no flowers yet.
My question is. I do not know whether they are determínate or indeterminate. Is there a way of knowing what they are, by say looking at the plant?
Thanks for the video, I'm a total newcomer to growing food, some great info here thank you.
thanks for this nice video, I have a question, how much sugar in should put in 20 liters water ?
Lovely video, thank you! I know this was filmed a long time ago, but did you discover that variety of Tomato it is that you show us at the end of your video? Many thanks!
All good stuff Still relevant 2020 ☺
Thank you so much for the milk carton tip. Our tomatoes are thriving after doing this
Tomatoes filmed with a potato