The post Tomato Growing Tips for Gardeners appeared first on Cascade Minerals.
]]>Do we go for it? Should we wait? These are the questions on all of our minds.
Fortunately, garden writer Kate Bryant addressed these questions (and more) in a May 2011 article that she wrote for the Portland Monthly. She recommends waiting a few weeks longer, until nighttime temperatures stay at 50 Fahrenheit or more.
Kate’s other tips include:
To grow juicy, delicious tomatoes like those you remember from your childhood (not the waxy, tasteless tomatoes on the shelves of most supermarkets today), add minerals and trace elements back to the soil using an all-natural remineralizing soil booster like Cascade Minerals Remineralizing Soil Booster.
Why? Because tomato plants require a multitude of nutrients to produce bright-red, rich-tasting juicy fruit. This makes tomatoes excellent benchmarks for determining the health and vitality of the soil that they grow in. Minerals and trace elements (like magnesium, calcium, silicon and iron) are essential to the growth, health and productivity of plants and people. If there are not enough minerals in the soil, there aren’t enough minerals in the tomatoes—and you’ll get fruit that is dull in color and in taste.
So be patient. Wait just a few weeks longer to plant your tomatoes in your garden and follow these tips—and you’ll be handsomely rewarded!
***
Cascade Minerals all-natural soil booster is made from massive basalt stones from Central Oregon’s legendary Cascade Mountains. We crush these rocks to product a finely ground, 100% natural product that releases the essential minerals and trace elements that plants and humans need to flourish. Application instructions: Rake or lightly till approximately one cup of Cascade Minerals into the soil around your tomato plants. Apply once per month to ensure the growth of healthy, productive plants.
The post Tomato Growing Tips for Gardeners appeared first on Cascade Minerals.
]]>