The Cottage Smallholder


stumbling self sufficiency in a small space

Growing tomatoes in large recycled olive tins

tomato plants in olive tinsAfter the disaster of my tomatoes getting what I thought was blight, the replacements that I bought are romping along. Good sturdy plants and much better than the understudies that were waiting in the greenhouse. These are growing but in a thin and straggly sort of way. I should have moved them to the cold frame much earlier on. Meanwhile it turns out the tomatoes with ‘blight’ didn’t have blight after all. If they had blight they would have turned black weeks ago. They are happily growing out of the carrier bags that I put them in and looking very healthy.

I put two new tomato plants in the large olive tins that I was given by the River Farm Smokery and they are doing really well in the kitchen garden. It was easy to prepare them for their new life as kitchen garden vessels. I took the tops off with a can opener and made lots of holes in the base of each tin with a hammer and a large nail (this made an enormous amount of noise and was rather fun). Each can holds about 18 litres of earth. They will have a bottle of reserve water when the weather gets a bit warmer.

Meanwhile, the decorative tins are giving me enormous pleasure. I have spotted them in gardens and on balconies abroad. Now I have my own. As they are a decent size there is no fear of them blowing over. Ah the joys of recycling.


  Leave a reply

13 Comments

  1. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Jenny

    There’s still time to plant tomato seed this year – they do need a heated propagator to help them germinate though.

  2. Hi I love your blog will be adding a link to it through mine at www.giftboxgarden.blogspot.com/. I tried growing tomatoes from seed late last year, but with the snow and never ending cold weather they gradually wilted and then disaster – died. It’s great to see your tomatoes are doing so well and slightly envious.

  3. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Bruce

    Water them well and then put a mulch on the surface of the barrel. Shells or stones or heavy compost. This will keep the moisture in during the day. Wet newspaper clumped up would do if you have nothing else.

    Hope that this helps

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

HTML tags are not allowed.

2,306,062 Spambots Blocked by Simple Comments


Copyright © 2006-2024 Cottage Smallholder      Our Privacy Policy      Advertise on Cottage Smallholder


Skip to toolbar
HG