How to Grow Tomatoes Upside Down
Tomatoes are a sweet and delicious fruit from a
very tolerant plant. Tomato plants are so popular to grow because they're easy
and homegrown tomatoes always taste best. As a vine, they're also good for the
gardener who has very little space. This article will tell you how to grow
tomatoes hanging from the ceiling, although it could be adapted to suit a
hanging basket, too.
Steps:
1
Set up the hanger. Choose a sunny place
indoors to hang the tomato plant's container. Your plant can be hung from a
hook in the ceiling or tied around a beam––use what works for the space you've
allotted.
If you're using a basket
around the bottle, using string or twine, knot the basket to create hangers for
attaching to the hooks or around the beams. Attach the basket to your ceiling
or beam, ready for the adding the plant. When selecting the basket, choose one
that will hold the upside-down milk or juice bottle that you'll be using
without slipping out or toppling sideways. Be sure to check this before hanging the basket up!
This step is prettier but optional, as you can also use the bottle direct (see
below).
2
Select a small tomato plant. Plants bought or grown from seed are both fine
choices. Water this plant well and set it to one side.
3
Take the large, clean plastic milk or juice bottle and
cut off the base. Remove the lid. See the
image for more details.
Tie string or twine to the edges
of the cut end of the bottle for hanging. Punch out the holes using a hole
puncher, or use a sharp tool to insert holes through which the string can pass.
Knot the string in place with loops to attach to the hangers you've made. While
the image shown later in this tutorial shows two holes, you may find three
holes produces a better balance––experiment to see what works best.
4
Take the tomato plant out of its original pot. Gently set it upside down in the milk or juice bottle.
Gently feed the plant through the pouring hole, so that the tomato plant is
hanging out of the hole, with the roots still inside the bottle.
5
Fill the milk bottle with a mixture of good compost
and garden soil. Then water it. (Now you see
why the hanger was put up first - it's impossible to put the plant on a surface
without covering it in soil or damaging the plant.) If using a basket, insert
the bottle into the hanging basket for hanging; if not, simply hang the bottle
direct to the hangers. You're now ready to begin growing your upside-down
tomato plant.
6
Water your
upside-down tomato plant regularly. The easiest way to water is
to purchase a plant watering bottle which contains a hooked tube that sucks up
the water and delivers it via the hook into the top of the container; you
simply hold up the bottle, tuck the hook over the top of the container and
squeeze the water in. These can be purchased from garden and hardware stores.
·
Be aware that the water tends to
dribble out of the neck of the bottle; this will gradually reduce as the root
system develops.
·
Try putting another plant
underneath your hanging tomato plant to catch the extra water that escapes, or
place a container under the plant to catch the water and use it to water your
other hanging tomato plants. Another option is to hang the
plant where it doesn't matter as much where the water drips, such as on your
balcony.
7
Finished.
Tips
·
Make sure the tomato plant gets
plenty of sunshine, as sunlight is the key to dark, ripe tomatoes.
·
To adapt it to suit a hanging
basket, cut a hole in the bottom of the basket liner and follow the above
steps. Similarly, you can grow tomatoes in the style of a hanging basket by
cutting off the bottom of
a bottle and growing the tomato plant out of the top of it with the vines
hanging over the edge.
·
Your tomato plant will grow
downwards, so hang it somewhere it won't be in the way of foot traffic, pets or
anything else. (Definitely don't hang it over a fish tank or in front of the
TV!)
·
Make sure the hook or beam is
secure, as the plant can get quite heavy once it begins to fruit.
Warnings
·
Don't over water; any plant that
receives too much water in an indoor environment risks mildew or damp-related
disease.
Things You'll Need
·
A large plastic milk or juice
bottle, clean it well and dry before using
·
A young tomato plant
·
Compost and/or garden soil;
choose a mix that's healthy for tomato plants
·
Trowel
·
Scissors/craft knife
·
String or twine
·
Hook in the ceiling (optional, if
you have something else it can be hung from)
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