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"Table Top" SFG considerations
+14
camprn
mijejo
Red-Leg
llama momma
plantoid
boog1
UnderTheBlackWalnut
boffer
sfg4uKim
martha
RoOsTeR
Mamachibi
Kelejan
eflan
18 posters
Page 1 of 2
Page 1 of 2 • 1, 2
"Table Top" SFG considerations
Hey there,
I'm an apartment dweller with a balcony and up until now have been doing my gardening in a collection of reject plastic pots. (Note for the frugal - big garden centers recycle any pots they no longer want or that get a little crack in them - with a little bleach they're perfectly fine. All you need to do is dig through the recycle bin to get free pots!)
Anyway - I'm rather excited about trying out the SQF method. It would make my balcony neater (which both myself and my landlord would appreciate) and I could stuff more plants into a similar space. The thing is, I've always shied away from vining tomato varieties because of the space requirement. I didn't think that a pot would be enough space - and my bush type romas always ended up nearly root bound in some pretty large containers. I used a 50/50 mix of compost (sheep & cow sugar primarily) and standard potting soil.
My question is... is a six inch depth really big enough for a tomato plant. I'd love to grow some San Marzanos for sauce, but I've never done it for lack of space. Do you need to make any special considerations (other than rigging up a trellis) to allow them to grow in a SQF with a permanent base?
I'll be heading to the lumber store soon to build three mini gardens - 2'x4' (two) and a 2'x2'. I'd like to stuff one of the big ones with tomatoes, peppers, eggplant and basil - two each. Is this too much to expect from the space? Should I add an extra board for a little bit of breathing room? This would increase the depth from 7" to 10.5" as I'll be using 2by4s.
Also... for the little box I'd like to throw a couple strawberry plants into it. I live near(ish) Detroit so we haven't exactly had terrible winters lately, and I'd like to keep the strawberry plants from year to year. I know that they do not need the depth - they have a fairly shallow root system - but would increasing the height of the box in addition to the usual mulching etc give me a better chance of overwintering them?
I suppose this just might be another example of old dog - new tricks. Just can't get it through my skull... but I'd just like to be sure! Especially since I'd like to surprise my Grandmother with a little raised box for her deck. She hasn't been doing any gardening the last couple years (I've taken over looking after her yardwork) and I know she'd appreciate a garden she can tend to herself without stooping.
Thanks in advance!
I'm an apartment dweller with a balcony and up until now have been doing my gardening in a collection of reject plastic pots. (Note for the frugal - big garden centers recycle any pots they no longer want or that get a little crack in them - with a little bleach they're perfectly fine. All you need to do is dig through the recycle bin to get free pots!)
Anyway - I'm rather excited about trying out the SQF method. It would make my balcony neater (which both myself and my landlord would appreciate) and I could stuff more plants into a similar space. The thing is, I've always shied away from vining tomato varieties because of the space requirement. I didn't think that a pot would be enough space - and my bush type romas always ended up nearly root bound in some pretty large containers. I used a 50/50 mix of compost (sheep & cow sugar primarily) and standard potting soil.
My question is... is a six inch depth really big enough for a tomato plant. I'd love to grow some San Marzanos for sauce, but I've never done it for lack of space. Do you need to make any special considerations (other than rigging up a trellis) to allow them to grow in a SQF with a permanent base?
I'll be heading to the lumber store soon to build three mini gardens - 2'x4' (two) and a 2'x2'. I'd like to stuff one of the big ones with tomatoes, peppers, eggplant and basil - two each. Is this too much to expect from the space? Should I add an extra board for a little bit of breathing room? This would increase the depth from 7" to 10.5" as I'll be using 2by4s.
Also... for the little box I'd like to throw a couple strawberry plants into it. I live near(ish) Detroit so we haven't exactly had terrible winters lately, and I'd like to keep the strawberry plants from year to year. I know that they do not need the depth - they have a fairly shallow root system - but would increasing the height of the box in addition to the usual mulching etc give me a better chance of overwintering them?
I suppose this just might be another example of old dog - new tricks. Just can't get it through my skull... but I'd just like to be sure! Especially since I'd like to surprise my Grandmother with a little raised box for her deck. She hasn't been doing any gardening the last couple years (I've taken over looking after her yardwork) and I know she'd appreciate a garden she can tend to herself without stooping.
Thanks in advance!
eflan- Posts : 29
Join date : 2012-01-08
Location : SW Ontario, Zone 6b
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
eflan to our Forum. I still have a lot to learn myself and I am sure others will be along in a bit to give you some help.
A nice thought on your part to surprise your Grandmother with her own box. Like most gardeners I am sure she misses the pottering around.
A nice thought on your part to surprise your Grandmother with her own box. Like most gardeners I am sure she misses the pottering around.
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Prior to my SFG, I planted all my tomatoes on my balcony in old Rubbermade totes. You know, the three-foot-deep variety? When I started considering switching to SFG, I grew a bunch of different tomato varieties in my Rubbermades. Only one of the plants' roots extended beyond six to seven inches even though there were three feet available, and it was a monster plant that grew trellised over nine feet tall. I'm pretty sure if I'd topped it at five or six feet, its roots would probably have stopped much shorter.
Mamachibi- Posts : 298
Join date : 2011-06-17
Location : Zone 6b
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Welcome eflan! Have you read the book yet? It will answer all your questions about depth and spacing in detail. It's a great book and super easy read that's packed full of information you will use again and again. We highly encourage all of our new members to read it.
Again, Welcome!
Again, Welcome!
I am my gardens worst enemy.
RoOsTeR- Posts : 4299
Join date : 2011-10-04
Location : Colorado Front Range
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Welcome, Eflan!
I echo what NR (that's our pet name for nKedrOoStEr!) said - the book is a fun and oh-my-goodness so helpful read.
And the short answer is, yes, 6" is plenty for tomatoes!
I'm curious, what is cow sugar?
I echo what NR (that's our pet name for nKedrOoStEr!) said - the book is a fun and oh-my-goodness so helpful read.
And the short answer is, yes, 6" is plenty for tomatoes!
I'm curious, what is cow sugar?
martha- Posts : 2173
Join date : 2010-03-03
Age : 67
Location : Acton, Massachusetts Zone 5b/6a
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
I'm curious, what is cow sugar?
I have no idea, but if it's a new slang term for cow manure/compost, I am all over it!
cow sugar
llama sugar
boffer sugar
chicken sugar
rabbit sugar...
I am my gardens worst enemy.
RoOsTeR- Posts : 4299
Join date : 2011-10-04
Location : Colorado Front Range
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
NR is right to encourage you to read the All New Square Foot Gardening book. It is FABULOUS and will answer most of your questions. In addition to finding it in your library or store, it's also available for some eReaders.
I grew San Marzanos last year and they did great in 6" of MEL'S MIX. Well they did great until Hurricane Irene knocked over my Bradford Pear right on top of my garden. You will be amazed at how much lighter the MM is than a 50/50 of manure & soil and is PERFECT for balcony gardening.
Don't forget when growing members of the nightshade family (tomatoes, eggplant, peppers, etc.) you cannot plant that same veggie (or any other nightshade) in that soil for 3 years. From eHow: They are the "mother load" for soil infections, pests, and disease.
Grow them in your first bed and give them, at least, 3 years before you
plant any nightshade vegetable in this dirt again.
Read more: How to Guide for Rotating Crops in the Vegetable Garden | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_4480241_guide-rotating-crops-vegetable-garden.html#ixzz1itD2E1kU
I grew San Marzanos last year and they did great in 6" of MEL'S MIX. Well they did great until Hurricane Irene knocked over my Bradford Pear right on top of my garden. You will be amazed at how much lighter the MM is than a 50/50 of manure & soil and is PERFECT for balcony gardening.
Don't forget when growing members of the nightshade family (tomatoes, eggplant, peppers, etc.) you cannot plant that same veggie (or any other nightshade) in that soil for 3 years. From eHow: They are the "mother load" for soil infections, pests, and disease.
Grow them in your first bed and give them, at least, 3 years before you
plant any nightshade vegetable in this dirt again.
Read more: How to Guide for Rotating Crops in the Vegetable Garden | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_4480241_guide-rotating-crops-vegetable-garden.html#ixzz1itD2E1kU
I have seen women looking at jewelry ads with a misty eye and one hand resting on the heart, and I only know what they're feeling because that's how I read the seed catalogs in January - Barbara Kingsolver - Animal, Vegetable, Miracle
sfg4u.com
FB: Square Foot Gardening 4 U
FB: Square Foot Gardening 4 U
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Welcome and congratulations for being the first newcomer of the year to bring up the subject of tomatoes and depth of MM.
That's a signal that it's time dust off one of my favorite sigs:
What people fail to realize is that plants get rootbound because the roots are searching for adequate nutrients and water for the plant and can't find them. When a plant is in MM and is watered properly, the root system is quite small.
boffer sugar: available everywhere, fresh daily, free, addictive
That's a signal that it's time dust off one of my favorite sigs:
Convincing SFG newcomers that six | inches is deep enough for tomatoes. |
What people fail to realize is that plants get rootbound because the roots are searching for adequate nutrients and water for the plant and can't find them. When a plant is in MM and is watered properly, the root system is quite small.
cow sugar
llama sugar
boffer sugar
chicken sugar
rabbit sugar...
boffer sugar: available everywhere, fresh daily, free, addictive
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Hi eflan!
+1 to read the ANSFG book
I also want to stress that the Mel's Mix (MM) is a CRITICAL component for this method. In order to SFG successfully, don't skimp on the MM. Read here:
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t7452-mel-s-mix-how-strong-is-your-backbone
But as we say around here, the message is worthless without pics, so here is a poster who had a large deck with tabletops (thinking you could do a scaled down version). Search for Boffer's posts on table tops - they are awesome...
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t7914-table-top-gardens
+1SFG4uKim - I think Lavender Debs grows San Marzanos too
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t5216-the-toy-box-the-return
+1 tomatoes will root just fine in 6" of MM!
On the forum, you will also find several examples of trellising, stringing, and staking that posters have done for their tomatoes, most all in 6" of MM.
Happy Gardening!
+1 to read the ANSFG book
I also want to stress that the Mel's Mix (MM) is a CRITICAL component for this method. In order to SFG successfully, don't skimp on the MM. Read here:
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t7452-mel-s-mix-how-strong-is-your-backbone
But as we say around here, the message is worthless without pics, so here is a poster who had a large deck with tabletops (thinking you could do a scaled down version). Search for Boffer's posts on table tops - they are awesome...
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t7914-table-top-gardens
+1SFG4uKim - I think Lavender Debs grows San Marzanos too
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t5216-the-toy-box-the-return
+1 tomatoes will root just fine in 6" of MM!
On the forum, you will also find several examples of trellising, stringing, and staking that posters have done for their tomatoes, most all in 6" of MM.
Happy Gardening!
Last edited by UnderTheBlackWalnut on 1/8/2012, 12:44 pm; edited 1 time in total (Reason for editing : sentence structure)
UnderTheBlackWalnut- Posts : 556
Join date : 2011-04-18
Age : 58
Location : Springfield (central), IL, on the line between 5b and 6a
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Addictive??? You're scaring me!
martha- Posts : 2173
Join date : 2010-03-03
Age : 67
Location : Acton, Massachusetts Zone 5b/6a
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
martha wrote:Addictive??? You're scaring me!
It wasn't veggies that brought you back to the forum after your hiatus last year, oh no! You were getting the Joneses for a boffer fix...
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Yeah, but I never thought you would catch on!
martha- Posts : 2173
Join date : 2010-03-03
Age : 67
Location : Acton, Massachusetts Zone 5b/6a
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Hey Boffer -
Tomatoes in 6" of MM....this sounds like another staf74 video in the making...
Does anyone have a video of their tomato roots in 6 inches of MM from when they pulled them last...??? I thought about taking pics but my phone battery was too low...now wish I'd charged it up and taken them...
Tomatoes in 6" of MM....this sounds like another staf74 video in the making...
Does anyone have a video of their tomato roots in 6 inches of MM from when they pulled them last...??? I thought about taking pics but my phone battery was too low...now wish I'd charged it up and taken them...
UnderTheBlackWalnut- Posts : 556
Join date : 2011-04-18
Age : 58
Location : Springfield (central), IL, on the line between 5b and 6a
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
I'm looking for two posts from last year where PattiPan and I layed out our tomato plants and rootballs to show the sizes. But I've lost track of them.
We made the posts because this comes up every year.
We made the posts because this comes up every year.
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Wow! Thanks for the quick replies!
Like I said - old dog and new tricks . Add in a little dose of "too good to be true" conditioning and that's the reason for the question, even after reading a majority of the book! Glad to see I was the first this year at least lol.
Needless to say, I'm looking forward to the process of building the beds and I'll be like a kid in a candy store when my seed catalogs finally arrive. I have pages and pages worth of plans for different setups, layouts and material lists to make the most of my 5'x7' balcony while still giving me room to sit with a book and set up my BBQ. But I *really* like the look of the beds on stilts... time to go back to the notebook. I think I might be OCD... At least I'll be prepared!
Anywho, again for all the insights and reassurances that I'm over-analyzing!
Like I said - old dog and new tricks . Add in a little dose of "too good to be true" conditioning and that's the reason for the question, even after reading a majority of the book! Glad to see I was the first this year at least lol.
Needless to say, I'm looking forward to the process of building the beds and I'll be like a kid in a candy store when my seed catalogs finally arrive. I have pages and pages worth of plans for different setups, layouts and material lists to make the most of my 5'x7' balcony while still giving me room to sit with a book and set up my BBQ. But I *really* like the look of the beds on stilts... time to go back to the notebook. I think I might be OCD... At least I'll be prepared!
Anywho, again for all the insights and reassurances that I'm over-analyzing!
eflan- Posts : 29
Join date : 2012-01-08
Location : SW Ontario, Zone 6b
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Eflan, just this morning I added (the brief version) of a quote from the book - it takes a new gardener 2 hours to learn SFG. It takes an experienced gardener two weeks!
Glad that you read the book, glad that you are here!
Glad that you read the book, glad that you are here!
martha- Posts : 2173
Join date : 2010-03-03
Age : 67
Location : Acton, Massachusetts Zone 5b/6a
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
welcome to the forum eflan
boog
boog
boog1- Posts : 256
Join date : 2010-09-01
Age : 68
Location : jackson,mi
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
I'm happy to be here, and I'm getting a ton of ideas. I think I might have to add an extra 2x2 box and rig up something similar to those tomato towers MarcyG uses here. Then I can put my tomatoes in there along with a pair of squash &/or melon (any suggestions here? I'll more than likely do a Charentais melon at least.)
And yes, 'sugar' refers to compost from manure. It's used a lot by farmers around here... no idea if it's used elsewhere. Sheep sugar just rolls off the tongue so easily!
And yes, 'sugar' refers to compost from manure. It's used a lot by farmers around here... no idea if it's used elsewhere. Sheep sugar just rolls off the tongue so easily!
eflan- Posts : 29
Join date : 2012-01-08
Location : SW Ontario, Zone 6b
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
martha wrote:Welcome, Eflan!
I echo what NR (that's our pet name for nKedrOoStEr!) said - the book is a fun and oh-my-goodness so helpful read.
And the short answer is, yes, 6" is plenty for tomatoes!
I'm curious, what is cow sugar?
As in " Oh sugar ! " from the same stable ... but a different jockey .
plantoid- Posts : 4095
Join date : 2011-11-09
Age : 73
Location : At the west end of M4 in the UK
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
I think I might be OCD...
You fit in already
I am my gardens worst enemy.
RoOsTeR- Posts : 4299
Join date : 2011-10-04
Location : Colorado Front Range
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Llama Sugar sounds great.
Reminds me of the annual visit from the cesspool guy arriving at my parents. Dad would say Here comes the Honeywagon.
Reminds me of the annual visit from the cesspool guy arriving at my parents. Dad would say Here comes the Honeywagon.
llama momma
Certified SFG Instructor- Posts : 4914
Join date : 2010-08-20
Location : Central Ohio zone 6a
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
sfg4uKim wrote:
Don't forget when growing members of the nightshade family (tomatoes, eggplant, peppers, etc.) you cannot plant that same veggie (or any other nightshade) in that soil for 3 years. From eHow: They are the "mother load" for soil infections, pests, and disease.
Grow them in your first bed and give them, at least, 3 years before you
plant any nightshade vegetable in this dirt again.
Read more: How to Guide for Rotating Crops in the Vegetable Garden | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_4480241_guide-rotating-crops-vegetable-garden.html#ixzz1itD2E1kU
Well heck...that shoots my plans a bit out the window. In the realm of the SFG, does this mean one square, or will I have to rotate my tomatoes from box to box?
Sorry about the thread hi-jack.
Red-Leg- Posts : 77
Join date : 2011-12-15
Location : Southwest Ohio, Zone 6
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Hi Red-Leg -
I was wondering about that too since I only just started last year. The location for my tomatoes is fairly fixed because it can't be anywhere near my black walnut.
So, does this mean I should switch the boxes out and grow the tomatoes in a different box in the same location? I could do that since they are 2x4 and have plywood bottoms.... :scratch:
I was wondering about that too since I only just started last year. The location for my tomatoes is fairly fixed because it can't be anywhere near my black walnut.
So, does this mean I should switch the boxes out and grow the tomatoes in a different box in the same location? I could do that since they are 2x4 and have plywood bottoms.... :scratch:
UnderTheBlackWalnut- Posts : 556
Join date : 2011-04-18
Age : 58
Location : Springfield (central), IL, on the line between 5b and 6a
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
Wait a minute . . . I thought I read in the book or saw on one of Mel's videos, that we do not have to worry about crop rotation with SFG. I believe - at least regarding nutrient rish growing medium - that adding a trowel of new compost would suffice.
What say all you SFG veterans? Do we need to rotate our nightshade crops?
What say all you SFG veterans? Do we need to rotate our nightshade crops?
mijejo- Posts : 161
Join date : 2011-05-25
Location : Cincinnati, Ohio
Re: "Table Top" SFG considerations
According to the book, page 144, we are rotating crops when we plant 3 times, 3 crops, per one season in a square. There's your rotation!
llama momma
Certified SFG Instructor- Posts : 4914
Join date : 2010-08-20
Location : Central Ohio zone 6a
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