chuckwood
Addicted to ArboristSite
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2008
- Messages
- 8,681
- Reaction score
- 15,518
- Location
- near the Great Smoky Mtns. Tennessee
Growing tomatoes has always been a problem because my soil is infested with fungus's. I never get them tied up and pruned in time. The leaves contact the soil and then the fungus travels up the plant and kills it. This year is different. I've got a heavy layer of straw mulch on top of a thin base of spread out newspapers. I pruned the plants quite a bit and have them in cages now. Half of them I'll spray with Daconil fungicide, which I hate to do. The other half will get the safer copper fungicides. I'm hoping for an end to the fungus amongus, with plenty of tomatoes to can and give away.
We've had plenty of rain here in TN, and I'll have a whopper corn and pole bean crop this year. I routinely plant pole beans in the corn, works great and I get many bushels of beans.
We've had plenty of rain here in TN, and I'll have a whopper corn and pole bean crop this year. I routinely plant pole beans in the corn, works great and I get many bushels of beans.