The “waiting” season of gardening has begun. It seemed that back in May and June I spent every spare minute outside in the garden planting, mulching, weeding, and admiring my handiwork, but now that the heat and humidity of July have arrived I think its time for the garden to start supplying me with the fruits (and vegetables!) of my labor. I am getting especially impatient for my dozens of green tomatoes to ripen so that I can harvest them. Every day I check my tomato plants and although most of the tiny fruits are still a lovely two-tone green color, a few are actually starting to turn red!
I have four “planned” tomato plants in my garden (two hanging upside-down in buckets and two in containers) and, much to my surprise, I also have 5-6 unplanned “volunteer” tomato plants that magically sprouted around our back patio. I guess that the mystery tomatoes must have sprouted from my partially cooked compost because they’re showing up between my basil and pepper plants as well as a new bed that Matt and I dug near our grill.
When I found the first plant (and second, and third… before the novelty wore off) I carefully transplanted them into containers filled with half compost and half soil-free mix. They have been thriving and I think it will soon be time to move them to larger containers.
My hanging tomatoes have been growing rapidly and seem to be unfazed by their upside-down orientation. They are potted in large 5 gallon buckets with soil-free mix and compost with thyme and parsley growing on top. (You can read more about how we planted them here.) The plant on the left is a cherry tomato plant and it is full of clusters of perfect little green tomatoes. The plant on the right is a plum tomato plant and has a few larger green tomatoes growing on its vines.
My two cherry tomato plants in containers are not doing quite as well as the hanging plants. This is probably because their containers are fairly small (3 gallons or so) and I left these plants out in direct afternoon sun during a heat wave while we were out of town last weekend. When we got home the plants were shriveled and wilted but after a thorough watering they have perked up and are looking OK. Both plants have dozens of green tomatoes and a few have started to turn red!
If even half of the green tomatoes on my plants turn red, it looks like we will be overwhelmed with fresh tomatoes in another few weeks, yum! I frequently eat tomatoes with basil (caprese salad, TBM pizza, homemade spaghetti sauce, etc.) so it’s a good thing that we also have an overabundance of beautiful dark green basil plants in our garden. I’ve already made several batches of pesto and I love being able to walk outside and pick fresh leaves whenever I want them.
The unplanned tomatoes aren’t the only surprise plants in our garden this year. We also have a small pumpkin patch that sprouted from leftover Halloween pumpkins and, much to our surprise, we discovered several giant squash plants growing outside our front door! Back in February we started cosmos, painted daisies, and zinnias from seed indoors and then we transplanted them (along with a generous helping of not-quite-ready compost that must have contained squash seeds) into two new beds by our front door. The flowers grew vigorously in June and a few weeks ago we noticed that one of the “flowers” had enormous prickly leaves. Well, last week we noticed beautiful yellow blossoms on the large-leaved plants and at that point realized that the “flower” plants were in fact squash plants. How exciting!
I think we’re on track to have a great harvest this year. So far we’ve picked at least forty green beans and have plenty of fresh basil, thyme, parsley, mint, and marjoram at our disposal. Now we just have to wait for our tomatoes to turn red!
Nice, healthy looking plants. Thanks for sharing
Hi Jesse, thank you! I just took a quick peek at your blog…. WOW! Your garden looks amazing. 🙂
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