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Old March 20, 2009   #1
gardenhead
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My tomato plants are about 5 to 6 weeks old, they apeared to be doing fine until recently. The stems are bulky, the foilage is good but they seem to be drooping. I have them in my sunroom under lights, for 10 to 12 hrs. a day. Could they be over watered? Over fertilized, or could it be we smoke occasionaly in the room? I have too much time invested to lose them now. Help!
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Old March 20, 2009   #2
newatthiskat
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If you could upload some pictures of the setup and the plants that would help a whole lot
Kat
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Old March 20, 2009   #3
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If I knew how I would. I will try tommorrow, it's bed time. Thanks for answering.
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Old March 22, 2009   #4
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Overwatering would be guess number one.

Do you have a couple of spares there that you could empty out
of whatever kind of pots they are in and take a look at the soil?
Maybe a couple that look completely dry?

I have been potting up some from small seed-starting cells to
newspaper pots, and it is amazing how they can look absolutely
bone dry on top yet the bottom inch of soil in the seed-starting
cell is still moist.
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Old March 22, 2009   #5
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I'd pop one out of the pot and take a look to see what's going on. Could they be rootbound?
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Old March 22, 2009   #6
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I use a moisture meter , maybe i'm not using it deep enough. I just got through moving them to a larger pot. Maybe that will help. Thanks for the advice. I am going to wait a couple of days and if they don't snap out of it, I will upload some pictures, now that I know how.
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Old March 23, 2009   #7
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What I do to figure out if watering is needed is to lift the pot and see how heavy it is. If you want to calibrate to what "dry" is, fill a pot with dry soil mix and compare the weights of your pots with that. After you've handled your seedlings for a while, you'll get the feel of "just right."
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Old March 24, 2009   #8
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Gardenhead,

Have you given them any fertilizer yet? Or not?
If you have, what strength/kind and mixture (concentration?) This info could help determine your problem too.

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Old March 25, 2009   #9
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Normally when my potted plants are drooping it's because they need water as the pots are generally 4" and don't hold enough water to support the plant all day as it gets bigger, especially when they are placed in a sunny south facing window. Ami
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Old March 25, 2009   #10
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Same here Ami. That's when I follow the rule of my FIL which was "pot up or plant out".
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Old March 25, 2009   #11
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I have been fertilizing once a week with Miracle Grow liquid Quick Start. I am beginning to think that's my problem. I am going to go to just regular Miracle Grow every 2 weeks.
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Old March 25, 2009   #12
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I have been gardening for 25 years, but have only started growing from seed the last 2 years. It keeps me from getting cabin fever. It is definitely a learning experiance. I am glad to have found this web site.
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Old March 26, 2009   #13
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Seedlings are kind of tender for MG. It's like giving a little kid
an espresso and a bowl of sugar cubes (kids do need more sugar
than adults, but they can still overdo it).

They may do better with something a little mellower, like
1/4 strength fish emulsion. Organic fertilizers are a lot
friendlier to seedlings, because they generally break down
more slowly, so the seedling does not get fertilizer-burned.
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Old March 26, 2009   #14
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Yes, I do agree with dice.

Maybe you need to give them just plain water for a week before starting them on the 1/4 strength fish emulsion. That should clear up the over fertilization problem.

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Old March 27, 2009   #15
dice
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Worm casting tea, a tea made out alfalfa or comfrey, clover or
chickweed from your yard pureed in a blender with water and
then strained, those are all alternatives that will not burn and
give seedlings enough to keep them going until transplant. (A
lot of people keep some fish emulsion around for the trace
elements in it and for plants that need a little nitrogen boost,
so I thought of that first.)
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