"Wonderful picture Cathy. Is it a Silver Boardered Fritillary?"
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Permalink Reply by JOAN BLISS on February 26, 2010 at 9:30am
Permalink Reply by Sparticuss The Gardenest on February 26, 2010 at 9:47am
Permalink Reply by Rich Bishop on February 26, 2010 at 9:49am
Permalink Reply by Perry Rosenfeld on February 26, 2010 at 10:51am
Permalink Reply by Sparticuss The Gardenest on February 26, 2010 at 12:05pm Sparticuss,
I live in North Florida, Zone 8. I have grown tomatoes up vertical supports all summer, and in late fall, I cut the lines that support my tomatoes and lie the plants down. Typically there is "green fruit" on the vine, which I leave. I then cover the plants with some hay as a mulch and don't pay much attention. The fruit that was already set will continue to grow for me and the foliage stays alive, but no new fruit will set (no polinators anyway) and I have tomatoes in March, after the last frost.
With this in mind, it may be worth a try if you have established plants next fall, to mulch heavily and see how you do. My ground never freezes. If yours does this may not work. I don't think tomato will survive any really severe cold. I can tell you that they won't grow much, but you can keep them alive over the winter.
Permalink Reply by Sparticuss The Gardenest on February 26, 2010 at 12:06pm One year I grew Seranno hot peppers in my living room here in Michigan. If you had the room and could provide enough light it should be possible. There is a greenhouse in Gibralter MI. that grows them throughout the winter, but they have a large hydroponic system setup. Plus I guess that people grow marijuana in their basements so why not Tomatoes. If I had the room I know that I could grow them.
Tomatoes are grown year round in green houses/Hot-houses all over the world, even Alaska. As long as you meet the plants light, nutritional, water and temperature requirements, this also goes for avacadoes. You might want to locate & visit in-door botanical gardens in your area. Take a camera and notebook, make notes on what plants they are growing. They post signs with the plants to show you it's classification, Basil- O.'African Blue'. Tired of the snow? Take the family and watch the snow fall as you walk through a tropical garden!
Permalink Reply by Sparticuss The Gardenest on March 1, 2010 at 9:41am yes you are right
Permalink Reply by Barbara zn8 VA on March 8, 2010 at 6:41pm
Permalink Reply by Sparticuss The Gardenest on March 9, 2010 at 7:31am There is a great book "Solviva" which discusses solar greenhouse techniques and the author grew tomatoes year round on Nantucket Island. A great read which discusses some of the pitfalls with a novel method.
Permalink Reply by Sparticuss The Gardenest on March 17, 2010 at 12:58pm Thank you so much, that book sounds right up my alley, I'm going to hunt it down and make it mine!
Barbara zn8 VA said:There is a great book "Solviva" which discusses solar greenhouse techniques and the author grew tomatoes year round on Nantucket Island. A great read which discusses some of the pitfalls with a novel method.
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