Do you want to grow the best tomatoes in taste and size? And want to have a bumper harvest? Then put these things in the hole before planting your tomato plant!
The homegrown TOMATOES are so delicious, and when you pick them fresh and eat, the delightful taste you get is just unmatchable. Better than store bought fruits. The thick, juicy, plump, sweet, a bit acrid and so satiating– the tomatoes are one of the first fruits (vegetable, if you say) everyone wants to grow from the beginning of the gardening season.
1. Baking Soda
It works and really a good trick (especially when you’re growing tomatoes in containers) if you want sweeter tomatoes. Simply sprinkle a small amount of baking soda around the base of your tomato plants. The baking soda will be absorbed into the soil and lower the acidity levels, thus, giving you tomatoes that are more sweet than tart.
2. Fish heads
Fish heads have been used as a natural fertilizer in the garden for a long time. Their popularity with tomato planting is not a myth that needs to be busted. It works! Their decay releases nitrogen, potassium, many essential trace elements, calcium and phosphorous. The only problem with burying fish heads is that critters may dig them up. To avoid this, bury deeply, at least a foot. You can drop them into the hole whole or use groundfish scraps which you can mix with water(2 cups) and milk(1 cup) for a supercharge solution. If you want to read more on this, here’s an article in detail!
3. Aspirin
Drop 2-3 aspirin tablets in the hole either whole or ground; this is to boost plant immunity, it also helps to ward off diseases like blight and increases the yield. The salicylic acid, a compound in aspirin is the reason why it works. You can also spray plants with the solution contain this drug. If you want to read more about ASPIRIN uses on tomato plants in detail, visit DailyMail UK.
4. Eggshells
Eggshells boost the calcium content in the soil. And just like us, Calcium is one of the most important components that plant needs for growth. Here’s a very educative article if you like to read, it also helps to prevent blossom end rot. Whether you’re planting tomatoes in the garden bed or containers, you can always put eggshells before planting.
Also Read: Eggshell Uses in the Garden
5. Epsom Salt
Tomatoes suffer from magnesium deficiency that is why it’s a good idea to add 1 or 2 tablespoons of Epsom salt while transplanting the seedling in the bottom of the planting hole (both in containers or garden bed). Cover this with a thin layer of soil; this is to make sure that roots are not directly touching Epsom salt.
Epsom salt must be used when growing tomatoes; it can do miracles. Read why you should use it here!
Also Read: 13 Great Epsom Salt Uses in the Garden
6. Kelp Meal
Kelp meal is rich in micro-nutrients and trace elements. It provides complete nutrient for plants, the addition of kelp gives tomatoes a turbo boosted start. Slow-release kelp fertilizer contains the tomato with sufficient nutrient over a period which prevents the plant from experiencing shock as is with the use of excess fertilizers. One cup-full of kelp meal is adequate for the plant at the time of planting. If you want to read more about kelp fertilizer, click here!
7. Bone Meal
Similar to kelp meal, bone meal is also an addition to the tomato hole during planting. A handful or cup-full of bone meal is essential for a blossoming and quality fruits of the tomato plant since it provides the much-needed phosphorus nutrient which is one of the most vital components for healthy tomato growth.
8. Used coffee grounds
Add well-composted coffee grounds to the planting hole when transplanting tomato seedlings to improve soil composition and provide a source of slow-release nutrients to your plants. It is an excellent source of fertilizer and can be used even as a mulch. We have written a comprehensive guide on coffee grounds uses, take a look!
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I have a tomato plant grown in my container garden….can I add the above things to its soil now after it already about a feet tall????
If course! I would grind it up and add water, rather than bury it, like a fertilizer, so that you don’t disturb the roots.
Yes. The coffee is good to restrain slugs. To be honest bonemeal or seaweed replicates all of the other goodness.
Hey cool article. What I do, if it’s any help, is plant my seedlings in egg shells, after I hav used the egg of course. Is a cool little container for a seedling and when it is ready to go into the ground just break up the bottom a little so the seeds can grow through and then you don’t disturb the roots too much and you have your source of nutrients. Hope this helps a little.
What a great idea, thanks for sharing!
I did this last year also! But I didn’t know about all the rest till now. Except Epsom salt. I read another article last year that I wish I hadn’t tried. It killed everything in the garden around AND INCLUDING what I used it under! If you use Epsom Salt that is in mineral form (unless you have know of a plant that has survived roots sitting in or too close too the salt) may i offer a suggestion to read and follow her directions with a layer of dirt between the root and the salt. Not a sprinkled layer, but I tried 1-1/2 inches dirt between new plants and salt and one inch with my existing transplants and salt. My existing plants are used to a spray of e.s & water to strengthen their stems and get a little in the dirt too. So they have been exposed to it for some time. Just wanted to post so no one else goes thru that sadness & disappointment. I love my gardens. That was heartbreaking. Thanks for your time!
I use Epsom salt dissolved in water and spray on my tomato plants. Works great!
Do,you spray the plant or just the soil around it?
Sounds great I will be trying
Thanks
Great tip …thanks
Where you grow Tomatoes & get 300 lbs tomatoes with 10 plants.
I grew tomato plants in my small home garden, they didn’t gave me fruits. They gave flowers only. Pl guide me & oblige.
Tomatoes have to have some sort of stress to bare fruit. In grad school, I grew big beautiful plants with lots of blossoms and never got a single tomato. Then I learned they need stress to bare fruit. So you should only fertilize them once when planting. A little shortage of water is supposed to be enough to stress them. Also, cutting back the plants can do it.
I harvest about 300 lbs of tomatoes each yeare from 10 plants and I do use eggshells coffee grounds. My biggest booSt however was when a friend told me to throw one adult multivitamin in each hole. I buy the cheapest mega bottle and use it now in every planting hole in my 1/2 acre garden. My plants are double the size they use to be and more flavorble.
Wow!Great idea!I’ll try it!
Wow! Do you crush up the vitamin or just put it in whole?
Thanks!
Aspirin? Please don’t poison the clean soil with drugs, use permaculture principles, make and use compost instead to “boost immunity” and yield better crops.
Or maybe as an alternative to aspirin you could open a capsule of White Willow Bark Extract. White Willow Bark is where aspirin came from (although slightly different when synthesized) and works in the human body to curb inflammation, just like aspirin does. It’s my choice for managing inflammation by taking a 500 mg capsule two or three times per day.
The active ingredient in aspirin is salicylic acid which comes from willow bark, and many other plants. It is about as natural as possible.
Aspirin is a product of the willow tree……acetylsalicylic acid…..
Asprin is now synthetic…hello!
It is most definitely organic.
Totally agree.
Do you do all eight of these at once?
No you don’t have to do all at once.
Tq for sharing
Gotta try this, Thanks so much!!
You know there are tomato fertilizers out there that will do the job so you don’t have to round up all these ingredients and hope they will work. As for adding vitamins…..that’s stretching it a bit. Years ago I had a spot on my property where I burned leaves and brush every year. Then I decided to move my garden to that very location. For several years I grew the most amazing crop of tomatoes ever. I was stunned but I learned later that it was the potash from burning that turned my normal toms into supertoms. Nowdays, I always make sure my garden gets all the potash it needs. Try it this spring.
No one has answered Monica’s question. Well do you do all eight of these at once????
this is all very interesting. growing up in hog country the garden at my dads house was an old barn yard and at my second house was an old barn yard and boy did these little pieces of earth grow vegetables, especially tomatoes. since, we built a house in a in an old hay field, clay ground super hard after three days of sun. the first couple years the garden did OK, the last 5 years i have tried many things and the tomatoes get a blight. i put the garden in different areas of the yard. i have taken soil samples to the fertilizer service. i am thinking about a way i can put hog manure from my father in laws hog barns and work it in the soil to give the ground some staying power. any thoughts on this. i will also try some of the eight items from this article.
It is better to grow your tomatoes under a hoop house. The rain splashing is what bothers your plants. Be sure to orient the house into the prevailing winds. You don’t even need ends on it.
You really need to add as much organic matter into the soil as possible. The best is compost and mature (composted) manure. I have similar problem with the soil – native one is red(ish) of clay variety with lots of rocks in it and so on… I live in the Mediterranean and believe me that I really know what it means to have poor soil and periods with a lot of sun and no rain – your soil turns to dry and hard and vegetables are really suffering in it.
Main problem is that this type of soil is low on organic matter wich serves as (among other things): much better water retention capabilities, home for many benefitial soil microorganisms and earthworms (king of the beneficial animals for gardeners!) and so on.
The thing is – plants in a poor (and/or hard) soil are weak and cannot fight properly any number of deseases and pests. First thing to do is to have a healthy and rich soil to start with, and then you can add some supplements (as in the above article) when you are planting/sowing.
I experimented a lot through the years and the best solution, and if you ask me – only solution working long term, is to put high quantities of compost and some rotten manure in your soil. Best time for it is after summer harvest and before low and freezing temperatures. Just adding fertilizers doesn’t help long term and it doesn’t help at all when your soil goes to dust or hard clump because it can not held water properly.
Hope this helps!
I don’t think doing all things at once is advisable. You might add too much nitrogen to the soil. I think as in all things (even watering), moderation and balance are key.
Sarah from littlepatiogarden.com
I’ve read a lot about just putting some nettle leaf.
Apparently it’s a very good natural fertilizer.
I’m also making water manure myself with nettle leaf. I’m surprise we don’t hear much about it in US. Apparently nettle can’t easily be found? (here in France , we have A LOT)
We have nettle all over southern BC. Cant see why it wouldnt be all over the western US
I used minced banana peels last year, worked out great!
I only use fish emulsion and a little Epsom salt
Yes so do I and worked great I harvested big plump mater’s.
One other benefit to epsom salt is it helps to break down clay and alow plants to access the water better. Do not over do the salt. If you do, gypsum will help counter along with some good manure. Be careful using hog and chicken manure as they are very rich and contain a high salt content.
I was thinking of using the eggshells, coffee grounds and multivitamin or Epson salt.
Do you think that would be ok.
I grind up cleaned and dried egg shells and time and I add some Epsom salt either in water or I just sprinkle it on the dirt at the base of my plants and water in. I don’t drink coffee or I’d be using that too. Mushroom compost is wonderful. To mix into the dirt when planting. I also mix in the above mentioned mixture with Epsom salts right into the dirt a few days before I plant just to let it settle in. I also rotate my crops and I have raised beds for most of my garden. Strawberries and raspberries are directly in the ground however. Hope that helps a bit. 😊
Sorry I meant to say Tums*** not time. Stupid autocorrect and bad me for not proofreading 😉
I can’t seem to grow lantanas from seed,
is there a trick? I heard you have to freeze the seeds, but they still aren’t coming up.
Lantanas grows wild in parts of the world that never freeze. It’s possible you are using seed from hybridised plants that will have a much lower germination rate. Try putting the seeds in moist soil, then letting the soil dry out for 2-3 weeks before starting to water again..
Great article.. I used 4 of the 8.. And had the best tomatoes ever. Thank you
Which 4 did you use?
Growing great tomotoes
Good I will try these methods. Its really good.
Hi I have a tomato plant growing in my garden, but the leaves keep turning yellow and drying up. Can I use those stuff to help.
I am gonna try the multi vitimin this year along with the salt, and egg shells…. but my question is do you do this for all plants ? Not just tomatoes?
My Dad always used egg shells and coffe grounds on all his plants especially tomatoes and flower plants and it worked great. But I am trying to grow tomatoes and cucumbers this year and believe me I did not inherite his green thumb I usually kill plants so wish me luck lol.
I grow ventanas from cuttings Boy from seed. I tal e about 5 cuttings 3 ” Long adn oír them in one golpe adn fertilidad them. One of them cuttings is liable to grow. I do the same with Crepe Myrtles trees.
I have two containers of tomatoes on my porch. They are giving alot of tomatoes. I planted them in Miracle Gro and thats all. I planted some chives and thyme in with the tomatoes
I have a balcony and have to grow in containers. I usually use a 5 gallon bucket from Walmart, drill holes in the bottom and I have used coffee grounds and egg shells before. In the 5 gal bucket should I use only one tomato or zucchini plant in the container or can I put in more than one. My balcony faces dead west so I get hot afternoon sun in so/cal. Thanks
Shirley j
Karen Morris I used to use Miracle Grow as well. Till I found out it’s toxic. I did use pesticides to be healthy but here I was putting toxic ingredients on my family’s food. I was try to grow food that was healthy for my family. Now I use coffee grounds and egg shells in my garden all year round. I am going to try bananas and Epson salt in between the gardening season. My ground get really hard and has clay. I just added a multi vitamin to my plants so I’ll keep my fingers crossed that that guys wasn’t a troll trying to trick us lol and that it’s NOT toxic. Live and learn with gardening! I figured if I will eat that vitamin it can’t be all bad but you seriously never know. Happy Gardening!!
I didn’t use pesticides! Lol
Add sand to hard heavy soils it looses it up. Manure is the best fertilizer, add lime also work it in real good.
I use several of those with my tomatos. I don’t use asparin. I use willow shreds and/or tea instead.
My approach to using Epsom salt is dissolve a tablespoon in a gallon of water and water with it. Seems to work well.
Years ago I read a Jerry Baker article that advised 2 Tums per hole for the calcium to prevent blossom end rot,also a bag of tea(and I don’t know what that was for) and a couple garlic cloves,whole,that will grow along with the tomato to ward off some insects. Whenever I’ve skipped the Tums,I end up with some blossom end rot,even if I forget to put it in the hole,I now make sure to lay some on the soil near the stem so the rains dissolve them and carry it to the roots.
Anita, my grandmother had a awesome green thumb and even with her flowers she planted garlic, and onion to make deeper colored blooms. I am trying now to use her ideas and hope my thumb turns green with plants! She died at 96 because she wanted to go be with granddad! Salt of the earth type!
Very useful information!! Thank you for this…
I’ve been reading here for the past hour or so trying to take on board as much information as possible and to thank all the contributors for their efforts. I’ll definitely try the tomato planting as I use them all the year round here in the west of Ireland. Thank you all
hi there,I’m in Botswana I have planted half a hacker of tomato trees,I want to sell to local stores,I should I do to get a great harvest,mind you!I’m taking care of them in every way.
Great coversations. Thoroughly enjoyed reading all the posts. Now I am motivated to go to one of the local coffee shops and ask for their coffee grounds once again. Used to get them for free! Thank you all for your tips.. cant wait to try. … from Houston Tx
To the gardeners that have heavy clay soils, the best permanent solution to this problem is, to add sand which keeps the soil more friable (loose) and add compost to your hearts delight. The sand needs to be dug in quite deeply to improve drainage. Compost on its own is not a permanent solution to to the problem of clay soils.
Thank you for the article!
Sheep dung in a hessian sack soaked in a tub of water, use the water on your tomatoes and expect a bumper crop, just keep topping up the water as you use it.
3 yrs ago I had my plants ready to transplant-(spread apart?)-was gonna do it “tomorrow” cuz all looked great!
But, the next day, wen I went to make this move . . . SomeThing had eaten every-single leaf from every plant (overnight!) . . . I had, I think 4-6 plants. Does anyone have a clue as to what this could have been? . . . Def not deer, as I live in South Carolina near the Beach (bout a mile away) and is definitely no deer here. ( the plants had been there ( outside, ㏌ ground ) for several weeks & about 1.5 – 2 ft tall. (Apparently it was also a “night” creeper/creature) . . . I’m still stumped, and, well, I lost my brother right about then as well, so now I’m ready to give Tomatoes another try! . . . Thanks in advance!
Can i put baking soda and epsom salt together????
I put powdered milk in the soil and mixed in a little bit and my plants were huge and had lots of tomatoes. I was also told to take eggshells, coffee grounds, and banana peels and blend in a blender and put this around the plants but I haven’t tried this.