He Put 4 Tomato Slices On A Bucket Of Dirt. 12 Days Later? Unbelievable!

ballscout1

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BGOL Investor
Got any overripe tomatoes in your fridge? Don’t throw them away! Instead, turn them into seedlings and grow entirely new tomatoes in just a handful of days. In this video, The Wannabe Homesteader teaches us how to grow tomatoes using nothing but a pot, some soil, one tomato… and, of course, the help of Mother Nature.

First, cut a tomato one quarter-inch thick. Throw the slices (in this case, four) onto a pot of compost. Then, throw potting soil and/or compost over the tomatoes until they’re barely covered. Water the pot sporadically. In 7-14 days, you should end up with 50-60 tomato seedlings. You can then pull out the larger seedlings and plant them in another pot, two plants per pot.

According to Yale Environment 360, every year, 30 to 40 percent of what is grown and raised in the United States is thrown away or rots between farms and kitchens. That’s a startling 133 billion pounds of food! This seedling technique seems almost too easy, but looks like it works like an absolute charm. I’m always left with at least one overripe tomato, and now I have the perfect way to give it new life. Please SHARE this helpful trick with your friends on Facebook!

http://cdn.vol.io/14836/210320162007335100920.mp4
 
This is a cool little trick. However, you would need a tons of pots, and dirt in order to make it worth the time and effort, by the time the plants grow tomatoes that are edible. "Minus whale" buy them at the store.
 
Got a thread for this called


Living off the land

Thanks

This is a cool little trick. However, you would need a tons of pots, and dirt in order to make it worth the time and effort, by the time the plants grow tomatoes that are edible. "Minus whale" buy them at the store.

No sir,,Tomato plants produce plenty and if you not making sauce you will be giving them away..

6 plants will do you if that many
 
Thanks



No sir,,Tomato plants produce plenty and if you not making sauce you will be giving them away..

6 plants will do you if that many
Bro, I live in FL and have grown tomatoes in my yard since we moved here 6 years ago. Built a box garden for my wife. Have tomato cages and all. We grow them throughout the year, but it's not worth the time for us. They produce, but we're not giving them away. A family of five (like ours) will go through them too quick.

It's a nice hobby, but unless you have a plot of land to dedicate to it and live in the right climate, there's only so many tomatoes you could grow and so much you can do with the amount of tomatoes you'll have.
 
Home grown tomatoes taste 10 times better than store bought. ....
Yeah, those deformed, ugly ass homegrown tomatoes are the business. During the summer, they sell 'local' tomatoes up here. They look nothing like the tomatoes in the 'normal' section, but taste like the ones I grew as a kid. It's better to buy from those farmers selling them on the sides of roads than the stores. The taste difference is very noticeable.
 
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