Upside Down Tomato Plant
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4 x Plant Self Watering for Upside Down Tomato Planters
| | $25.00 End Date: Thursday Feb-23-2012 9:39:10 PST Buy It Now for only: $25.00 Buy It Now | Add to watch list |
(4L) Plant Self Watering for Upside Down Tomato Planter
| | $40.00 End Date: Thursday Feb-23-2012 9:49:09 PST Buy It Now for only: $40.00 Buy It Now | Add to watch list |
(3) Plant Self Watering for Upside Down Tomato Planters
| | $20.00 End Date: Thursday Feb-23-2012 10:04:47 PST Buy It Now for only: $20.00 Buy It Now | Add to watch list |
2 x Plant Self Watering for Upside Down Tomato Planters
| | $20.00 End Date: Thursday Feb-23-2012 10:08:20 PST Buy It Now for only: $20.00 Buy It Now | Add to watch list |
TOPSY TURVY Cloudburst Watering & Feeding Cane for upside down tomato plants NIB
| | $10.95 (0 Bids) End Date: Sunday Feb-26-2012 16:03:02 PST Buy It Now for only: $12.95 Buy It Now | Bid now | Add to watch list |
Upside Down Patio Garden Plant Large Tomato New.. start your garden early !!
| | $19.99 End Date: Monday Feb-27-2012 14:31:27 PST Buy It Now for only: $19.99 Buy It Now | Add to watch list |
TOPSY TURVY UPSIDE DOWN TOMATO PLANTER LOT(2) TT011112
| | $22.99 End Date: Wednesday Feb-29-2012 15:03:22 PST Buy It Now for only: $22.99 Buy It Now | Add to watch list |
Hang & Grow Tomato Planter Upside Down Plant Garden New
| | $7.98 End Date: Friday Mar-9-2012 13:49:10 PST Buy It Now for only: $7.98 Buy It Now | Add to watch list |
TOPSY TURVY Upside - Down Tomato Planter!
| | $10.90 End Date: Sunday Mar-18-2012 1:20:05 PDT Buy It Now for only: $10.90 Buy It Now | Add to watch list |
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Topsy Turvy Upside Down Tomato Plant- ASOTV

Grow delicious tomatoes all season longHangs on deck balcony or patioEliminates weeding caging & stakingGrow organic tooThe topsy turvy planter is simple to set up and maintain. The swivel top is easy for turning and you can use ordinary potting soil. The planter works by using gravity as a vertical growing advantage. The vertical grow bag heats the plant like a greenhouse so the root system explodes and the gravity pulls the water and nutrients directly to the roots.

Grow delicious tomatoes all season longHangs on deck balcony or patioEliminates weeding caging & stakingGrow organic tooThe topsy turvy planter is simple to set up and maintain. The swivel top is easy for turning and you can use ordinary potting soil. The planter works by using gravity as a vertical growing advantage. The vertical grow bag heats the plant like a greenhouse so the root system explodes and the gravity pulls the water and nutrients directly to the roots.
Allstar Marketing TT011112 Topsy Turvy Upside Down Tomato Planter

Allstar Marketing TT011112 Topsy Turvy Upside Down Tomato Planter The Topsy Turvy Tomato Planter is the most ingenious invention to grow nice delicious tomatoes. Because the Topsy Turvy is upside down, gravity pulls the water and nutrients directly from the root to the fruit, giving you up to 30 Ibs. of deliciously ripe tomatoes per plant! It's so simple to use and works perfectly. Just place any tomato plant in the planter, add your favorite potting soil, hang it up and water. The sun warms the plant like a greenhouse, the root system explodes and thrives inside the planter. Plus, hanging in the air helps reduce ground fungus, harmful bacteria, cutworm damage, use of pesticides, digging & weeding and backbreaking work. What's more, it can also grow cucumbers, peppers, zucchini, and more, perfect for home-made sauces, sandwiches and salads. Call it upside down tomato planter or topsy turvy, the Topsy-Turvy Planter makes it easy to grow tomatoes and vegetables without a lot of back breaking work. Growing tomateos upside down elimiates the need for cages, stakes and weeding. Hang the Topsy Turvy tomato planter from your deck, porch or a tree branch. As the sun warms the planter, the roots grow and thrive inside the planter. The planter has a built in funnel at the top for water & fertilize. Because the Topsy Turvy is upside down, water and fertilizer go directly from the root to the fruit. Allstar Marketing TT011112 Topsy Turvy Upside Down Tomato Planter Features: Upside down tomato planter Grows delicious, juicy, tomatoes all season long Hang on deck, balcony, or patio Eliminated weeding, caging, and staking Just add your own plant and ordinary potting soil Also grows cucumbers, eggplants, herbs, and more Grow organic too 10" x 3.25" x 10" 1 lb 6 oz

Allstar Marketing TT011112 Topsy Turvy Upside Down Tomato Planter The Topsy Turvy Tomato Planter is the most ingenious invention to grow nice delicious tomatoes. Because the Topsy Turvy is upside down, gravity pulls the water and nutrients directly from the root to the fruit, giving you up to 30 Ibs. of deliciously ripe tomatoes per plant! It's so simple to use and works perfectly. Just place any tomato plant in the planter, add your favorite potting soil, hang it up and water. The sun warms the plant like a greenhouse, the root system explodes and thrives inside the planter. Plus, hanging in the air helps reduce ground fungus, harmful bacteria, cutworm damage, use of pesticides, digging & weeding and backbreaking work. What's more, it can also grow cucumbers, peppers, zucchini, and more, perfect for home-made sauces, sandwiches and salads. Call it upside down tomato planter or topsy turvy, the Topsy-Turvy Planter makes it easy to grow tomatoes and vegetables without a lot of back breaking work. Growing tomateos upside down elimiates the need for cages, stakes and weeding. Hang the Topsy Turvy tomato planter from your deck, porch or a tree branch. As the sun warms the planter, the roots grow and thrive inside the planter. The planter has a built in funnel at the top for water & fertilize. Because the Topsy Turvy is upside down, water and fertilizer go directly from the root to the fruit. Allstar Marketing TT011112 Topsy Turvy Upside Down Tomato Planter Features: Upside down tomato planter Grows delicious, juicy, tomatoes all season long Hang on deck, balcony, or patio Eliminated weeding, caging, and staking Just add your own plant and ordinary potting soil Also grows cucumbers, eggplants, herbs, and more Grow organic too 10" x 3.25" x 10" 1 lb 6 oz
Allstar Marketing Topsy Turvy Upside Down Tomato Planter TT011112

Upside down tomato planter. Grows delicious juicy tomatoes all season long. Hang on deck balcony or patio. Eliminates weeding caging and staking. Just add your own plant and ordinary potting soil. Also grows cucumbers eggplants herbs and more. Grow organic too. 10 x 3.25 x 10 . 1 lb 6 oz. Length: 10. Width: 10. Height: 3.25

Upside down tomato planter. Grows delicious juicy tomatoes all season long. Hang on deck balcony or patio. Eliminates weeding caging and staking. Just add your own plant and ordinary potting soil. Also grows cucumbers eggplants herbs and more. Grow organic too. 10 x 3.25 x 10 . 1 lb 6 oz. Length: 10. Width: 10. Height: 3.25
Watch a Video about Upside Down Tomato Plant
2.48 min. | 0 user rating
This is a video about my upside down tomato plant. Enjoy. If you have any questions or would like to give me some tips or feedback wheter on gardening, filming or about my English you are very welcome =).
FAQ and Ideas for Upside Down Tomato Plant
- How do you prune an upside-down tomato plant?
A Well, if you mean pinching off the suckers...the fact that it's upside down wouldn't change how you do it. Pinch off the tiny "extra" shoot that grows from the crotch between the main stem, and the side branch. If you're talking about cutting the plant back with pruners....I have no idea why you'd want to do that to a tomato plant.
A Well, if you mean pinching off the suckers...the fact that it's upside down wouldn't change how you do it. Pinch off the tiny "extra" shoot that grows from the crotch between the main stem, and the side branch. If you're talking about cutting the plant back with pruners....I have no idea why you'd want to do that to a tomato plant.
- Do you have homemade instructions for the upside down tomato plant?
A Not home made, at least not my home... Upside-down Tomato Plants Growing Tomatoes Upside-Down At first glance, this might look like an unusual way to grow tomatoes. But Jim Appleby from Iowa has discovered several benefits to hanging his tomatoes in buckets. First, the air can circulate better so the plants have almost no disease problems. Second, the fruit doesn’t rot as quickly as that on the ground. And finally, some critters that eat tomatoes have trouble getting to the ripening fruit. To make the upside-down containers, Jim used 5-gallon buckets with tight-fitting lids. He recycled his from a restaurant, but says you can find them many places, such as paint or hardware stores. Jim scrubs each bucket out with soapy water and makes sure the handle is attached securely. He cuts a 2-inch or larger diameter hole in the center of the lid and one in the bottom of the bucket. To make the holes, he uses a drill with a hole saw bit (an attachment for cutting a door to install the doorknob). With the bucket standing upright and the lid off, Jim covers the hole in the bottom with a coffee filter or scrap of fabric. That way the soil won’t fall out when he turns the bucket over. He fills the bucket full of a lightweight potting mix, shaking it to settle the soil. 2 in. or larger diameter hole cut in bucket lid for both drainage and watering Established tomato seedling ready to hang Before he puts the lid back on, Jim lays another coffee filter over the soil where the hole will be. Next, he puts the lid on and turns the bucket upside down. Jim cuts a slit through the filter in the hole and plants a tomato seedling. To give the tomato a fast start, he strips off the lower leaves and plants the seedling deeply so roots can form along the stem. He places the planted bucket in a sunny location and keeps it well-watered for the next few weeks. When the plant is about a foot tall, Jim’s ready to hang it up. The bucket needs a solid support to hold the weight. A clothesline pole is ideal. If you hang the bucket from a building, make sure it won’t bang into a window or the siding on a windy day. This part is easier with two people — one to lift and hold the bucket and one to fasten the chain. Jim drapes a chain over the clothesline post while a friend lifts the bucket. He pulls the chain through the handle of the bucket and fastens the ends together. You can buy chain loops made specifically for fastening or use a piece of heavy wire and twist it to hold the chain together. Either way, Jim finds he can raise and lower the height to harvest his tomatoes — From Garden Gate Issue 39 http://www.minifarmhomestead.com/gardeni...
A Not home made, at least not my home... Upside-down Tomato Plants Growing Tomatoes Upside-Down At first glance, this might look like an unusual way to grow tomatoes. But Jim Appleby from Iowa has discovered several benefits to hanging his tomatoes in buckets. First, the air can circulate better so the plants have almost no disease problems. Second, the fruit doesn’t rot as quickly as that on the ground. And finally, some critters that eat tomatoes have trouble getting to the ripening fruit. To make the upside-down containers, Jim used 5-gallon buckets with tight-fitting lids. He recycled his from a restaurant, but says you can find them many places, such as paint or hardware stores. Jim scrubs each bucket out with soapy water and makes sure the handle is attached securely. He cuts a 2-inch or larger diameter hole in the center of the lid and one in the bottom of the bucket. To make the holes, he uses a drill with a hole saw bit (an attachment for cutting a door to install the doorknob). With the bucket standing upright and the lid off, Jim covers the hole in the bottom with a coffee filter or scrap of fabric. That way the soil won’t fall out when he turns the bucket over. He fills the bucket full of a lightweight potting mix, shaking it to settle the soil. 2 in. or larger diameter hole cut in bucket lid for both drainage and watering Established tomato seedling ready to hang Before he puts the lid back on, Jim lays another coffee filter over the soil where the hole will be. Next, he puts the lid on and turns the bucket upside down. Jim cuts a slit through the filter in the hole and plants a tomato seedling. To give the tomato a fast start, he strips off the lower leaves and plants the seedling deeply so roots can form along the stem. He places the planted bucket in a sunny location and keeps it well-watered for the next few weeks. When the plant is about a foot tall, Jim’s ready to hang it up. The bucket needs a solid support to hold the weight. A clothesline pole is ideal. If you hang the bucket from a building, make sure it won’t bang into a window or the siding on a windy day. This part is easier with two people — one to lift and hold the bucket and one to fasten the chain. Jim drapes a chain over the clothesline post while a friend lifts the bucket. He pulls the chain through the handle of the bucket and fastens the ends together. You can buy chain loops made specifically for fastening or use a piece of heavy wire and twist it to hold the chain together. Either way, Jim finds he can raise and lower the height to harvest his tomatoes — From Garden Gate Issue 39 http://www.minifarmhomestead.com/gardeni...
Compare these Upside Down Tomato Plant Prices from Online Retail Stores
New space - saving planter... The Upside - down Tomato Garden. Forget staking tomato vines. Let gravity take over with this innovative Planter that elevates the planting bed. Up to 4 tomato plants grow downward from 4 pop-out holes in the bottom....
This is the elevated tomato garden that trains vines to grow downward, allowing tomatoes to ripen in the air (not in the ground) where they won't rot. The compact planter can fit in any space with ample sunlight, even balconies. Complementary plants...
Upside down planters are a great way to grow tomatoes, if watered well you will enjoy a bumper crop. Keeping the soil moist can be a little tricky because the soil in the planters tend to dry out very quickly and most of the useful moisture the plant...
Topsy Turvy - The Topsy Turvy Upside Down Tomato Planter is the world s easiest way to grow tomatoes! Hangs upside down on a deck, balcony or patio. Eliminates weeding, caging and staking. Just put your own plant in the bottom, ordinary potting soil in...
AGU1008 Features: Planter Grows delicious, juicy, tomatoes all season long Hang on deck, balcony, or patio Eliminated weeding, caging, and staking Just add your own plant and ordinary potting soil Also grows cucumbers, eggplants, herbs, and more Grow...
Topsy Turvy Upside Down Tomato Planter, Hang On Your Deck, Balcony, Patio, Eliminates Caging & Staking, Eliminates Tying, Eliminates Blight & Fungus, Uses Ordinary Potting Soil, Trim, Sucker & Harvest Standing Up.





