SprigOfTheLivingDead
Garden Addicted
So I have a simple 4x4 tent in my basement, along with separate seeding and sprout setups. I've overwintered stuff before, but have never really had the space to properly do something inside over winter, minus stuff on Windows sills. So, when the Mrs and I moved it gave me an opportunity to get a proper setup.
One of my desires was to grow tomatoes, so along with my herbs and spicy peppers I thought I'd give some tomatoes a shot. Not really having experience with indoor growing I started a few experiments (indeterminate vs determinate, 5-gal buckets vs cloth, and large vs small tomatoes) and away I went.
First lesson: start early.
I did not actually sprout my seeds until late September. This was probably due more to our third kid being born earlier that month than anything else, but my point is we haven't had a fruit ripen until December. So, next year I'll start that process in August, and probably will start my stuff from clippings
Second Lesson: only grow determinate tomatoes inside.
I've had to clip my desters back so much I'm pretty sure they don't like me anymore. That is to say I'm pretty sure I'be shocked them and will likely not get the amount of fruit I could have if I had grown something a bit smaller.
Third Lesson: cloth buckets all the way.
I cannot explain how happy these cloth buckets have made my plants, and how much easier it's made everything, specifically watering.
My good news today is I just harvested our first dester
I'll update as more lessons are learned
One of my desires was to grow tomatoes, so along with my herbs and spicy peppers I thought I'd give some tomatoes a shot. Not really having experience with indoor growing I started a few experiments (indeterminate vs determinate, 5-gal buckets vs cloth, and large vs small tomatoes) and away I went.
First lesson: start early.
I did not actually sprout my seeds until late September. This was probably due more to our third kid being born earlier that month than anything else, but my point is we haven't had a fruit ripen until December. So, next year I'll start that process in August, and probably will start my stuff from clippings
Second Lesson: only grow determinate tomatoes inside.
I've had to clip my desters back so much I'm pretty sure they don't like me anymore. That is to say I'm pretty sure I'be shocked them and will likely not get the amount of fruit I could have if I had grown something a bit smaller.
Third Lesson: cloth buckets all the way.
I cannot explain how happy these cloth buckets have made my plants, and how much easier it's made everything, specifically watering.
My good news today is I just harvested our first dester

I'll update as more lessons are learned