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-   -   Growing toms in 5 Gal Construction Buckets (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=42438)

nniemiec August 3, 2016 10:05 AM

Growing toms in 5 Gal Construction Buckets
 
For those of you that optimize your self-watering gutter systems with aerated buckets & properly amended soil-less mixture - how tall are you able to grow indeterminates? I assume most astute growers prune to a single stem as well to encourage centered-growth.

encore August 3, 2016 12:22 PM

mine got to 6 feet then i cut the tops, didn't prune the stems, just let them go, i was gone for 5 days ealier and they kinda got out of control, and are sagging down, tried to get them tied up but kept damaging the branches so i'm just letting them go. lol

luigiwu August 3, 2016 12:31 PM

They can grow as tall as your structure allows you to support them. I try and prune to only 2 to 3 stems at the beginning of the season but I don't have the time to be on top of the pruning everyday/week so I pretty much let them go wild after the 4th of july...
[url]http://tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=37141&highlight=urban[/url]

nniemiec August 3, 2016 12:37 PM

you have a great set-up Luigi - would you mind sharing w. me how you feed your toms? I'm leaning toward downsizing to 5 gal buckets next year since the larger (18 gal)containers are just more work vs. & not much more yield...vs. smaller containers.

luigiwu August 3, 2016 12:48 PM

Thanks! The magic of the system imo is the float and the bottom gutter. I am using 5 gallon HD buckets and 10gallon root pouches (I plant 2 in the root pouches.)
I put a cup of 10-10-10 as a ring at the top at the beginning of the season. I supplement a little bit with calcium nitrate to battle BER when they are flowering heavily.
Everything is ripening now so I expect there to be another bout of flowering where I will supplement with Masterblend fertilizer (and Epsom salt + Calcium Nitrate) to take it through to November I expect.
One of these seasons, I want to try amending using natural products like Alfafa pellets, oyster shells etc like someone else on here ( I think Fonseca) does...
But right now for busy me, this gives me great results for the amount of time/effort I can allot to it...
I'll try and take some pics this weekend to update that thread...

nniemiec August 3, 2016 01:11 PM

i noticed you only aerate your buckets towards the bottom of them? if i'm seeing that correctly, why only at the bottom vs. all over the bucket? thanks!

luigiwu August 3, 2016 01:22 PM

I personally am not all that convinced that the holes in the buckets do anything. Assuming most of the root is at the bottom (seeking water) I like to think the aeration at the bottom at least helps with root pruning, if nothing else. Since sometimes I don't get around to covering the tops like this year, the holes at the bottom will help with drainage if there is a big storm.

Gerardo August 3, 2016 11:28 PM

I recently culled a multi stemmed plant and it was 15 ft +. I have a couple of Cowlick's Bwine that have gone up, down, and are going up again loaded with fruit. So they should be at the 15 ft range also.

I followed AKMark's advice to prune all the way and it promotes flowering/new growth. I'd like to say I'm diligent on all my pruning duties, yes I'd like to say that.

Container size: with constant hydration the volume requirements go down significantly; mine are reusable shopping bags inside dollar store baskets with holes. I'd guesstimate they hold 4 gallons of mix, with about 3 inches of mulch.

Your 5 gal buckets will provide enough volume to produce some tall beasts.

Fertilizer strip, periodic liquid nutes + Ca, and compost tea as a drench completes the combo. Eventually I'll fertigate, just not right now.

BajaMitch August 4, 2016 03:30 PM

luigiwu and Gerardo, what potting mix exactly do you fill your 5 gallon buckets with? That is, by volume what is your potting mix recipe (brands used would help as well).

Thank you, in advance.

Gerardo August 5, 2016 01:25 PM

Hard to give you exact percentages, since I recycle a fair amount of the mix, and it has various brands in it.

Guesstimate, by volume:

20 % perlite (big bag of Aztec perlite, cheap at the hydro store, especially if it's an open bag)
10 % coco coir (blocks purchased in previous seasons, still lingers)
30 % Peat moss (at Home Depot, 14 USD or so for the bale, label used to be white, now it's black)
25 % veg compost-worm castings-sheep manure (my own, and other sources)
The rest fine bark-small wood chips (many sources)

Amendments Alfalfa Meal, Crab Meal, granulated fertilizer strip, dol lime, drench w favorable microbiology. Guanos make it in there too sometimes

My Foot Smells August 6, 2016 06:58 AM

1 Attachment(s)
[QUOTE=Gerardo;584538]Hard to give you exact percentages, since I recycle a fair amount of the mix, and it has various brands in it.

Guesstimate, by volume:

20 % perlite (big bag of Aztec perlite, cheap at the hydro store, especially if its an open bag)
10 % coco coir (blocks purchased in previous seasons, still lingers)
30 % Peat moss (at Home Depot, 14 USD or so for the bale, label used to be white, now it's black)
25 % veg compost-worm castings-sheep manure (my own, and other sources)
The rest fine bark-small wood chips (many sources)

Amendments Alfalfa Meal, Crab Meal, granulated fertilizer strip, dol lime, drench w favorable microbiology. Guanos make it in there too sometimes[/QUOTE]

Nice mixology.

Q: I've got a free source of perlite minus bag (pic), but it is the small granule. This guy works for chem company that ships liquids and they use the coarse perlite for packing. He gets the rubble, and has a mountain (literally) of the stuff over a 20 yr. span. I can bring my trailer and load up.

Is the small granule stuff even worth the effort? I've tossed a few wheelbarrow loads here and there. But getting interesting in mixing my own batch for buckets and pots, as the aftermarket bag of potting mix is $$$.

[ATTACH]65004[/ATTACH]

PhilaGardener August 6, 2016 07:12 AM

Wow, that is a great source of perlite! I wonder how to find that sort of operation discarding "fines" in my area . . . Has anyone else has luck locating sources like that?

My Foot Smells August 6, 2016 07:30 AM

philly, wish i had another picture. his pile looks like ski slope in tahoe early march. it's massive. but sandlike........

my neighbor across the holler, does saddle bred horses, which as you can imagine, get fed filet mignon (figurativeally speaking of course). i've gotten a few loads, but the ants go nuts on the stuff.

maybe it would be in my interest to get one of those cheap concrete mixers (electric) and work on a mix. man, i'm just too tired to chop it up by hand. but come fall, may be in different frame of mind.

luigiwu August 6, 2016 08:49 AM

I use the Larry Hall DIY potting mix - I am sure its covered in one of his youtubes somewhere. How big are you planning your RGGS garden to be? A bag of Perlite from Home Depot runs around $16 and goes a ways. I think maybe only two bags max was needed to do all the containers you see (with leftover.)

[U]Larry Hall DIY Potting MIX (SWC medium must be peat based ie. soil-less.):[/U]
[COLOR=#000000][FONT=Arial]2 (5-gallon) bucket of peat moss (dry)[/FONT][/COLOR]
[COLOR=#000000][FONT=Arial]1 (5-gallon) bucket of well-rotted manure or compos[/FONT][/COLOR]
[COLOR=#000000][FONT=Arial]1 3-quarts coarse Perlite[/FONT][/COLOR]
[COLOR=#000000][FONT=Arial]1.5 cups Garden lime[/FONT][/COLOR]
[COLOR=#000000][FONT=Arial]˝ c Epsom Salt[/FONT][/COLOR]

[COLOR=#000000][FONT=Arial]Mix Well.[/FONT][/COLOR]
[COLOR=#000000][FONT=Arial]To use/plant in 5-gallon container, mix in the top ⅓ of container potting mix with extra
[/FONT][/COLOR]
[COLOR=#000000][FONT=Arial]1 cup of lime[/FONT][/COLOR]
[COLOR=#000000][FONT=Arial]handful of epsom salt.[/FONT][/COLOR]

Nematode August 6, 2016 09:21 AM

Is it like dust or is it small granules?
Seems like you could adjust up the perlite fraction of a mix if its fine granules compared to coarse and achieve a similar result.

Also of interest is how some larger particles are important for aeration.

It seems any grow media is a balancing act of air filled porosity and water holding capacity.


Figure 1 is interesting.

[URL="https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=http://journals.modares.ac.ir/pdf_4685_1f9349a832fab493d5fa60c5a25ee046.html&ved=0ahUKEwjP9u-e7qzOAhWCOSYKHfOnBbwQFggqMAM&usg=AFQjCNEOJVS3PIIKY719lXI4dZbIdeV8Ug&sig2=e8HElIz1H-4VzLUqM_3cjA"]https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=http://journals.modares.ac.ir/pdf_4685_1f9349a832fab493d5fa60c5a25ee046.html&ved=0ahUKEwjP9u-e7qzOAhWCOSYKHfOnBbwQFggqMAM&usg=AFQjCNEOJVS3PIIKY719lXI4dZbIdeV8Ug&sig2=e8HElIz1H-4VzLUqM_3cjA[/URL]


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