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Old January 18, 2008   #1
tlcmd
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Default Companion Plants &/or Biologicals

Has anyone experience with the use of companion plants &/or biologicals (beneficial insects, mites, & organisms) in the protection of their garden and tomatoes? Especially regarding prevention of TSWV?
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Old January 19, 2008   #2
Raymondo
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Alas, no. I plant lots of things together, almost randomly, so not really companion planting and the diversity brings in plenty of beneficial bugs but again, not deliberate.
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Old January 19, 2008   #3
Granny
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Originally Posted by tlcmd View Post
Has anyone experience with the use of companion plants &/or biologicals (beneficial insects, mites, & organisms) in the protection of their garden and tomatoes? Especially regarding prevention of TSWV?
Many years ago when companion planting first became "popular" my Mom and I tried some companion planting. The recommendation at that time was to plant potatoes in the same hole as your tomatoes. Unfortunately, that was the last garden that Mom & I did together. She died that winter and in all the hoopla of her last illness I have forgotten whether it worked well or not.

I do intend to try some companion planting myself this year. Ordered a couple of books recommended by one of the better-known organic seed websites from Amazon, thinking they would provide me with more information than is easily available online. Carrots Love Tomatoes is a huge disappointment - nothing but a list of vegetables. I gave this one of the lowest ratings I've ever given out for a book in any field and would return it if it were not so much trouble.

The other book was Great Garden Companions by Sally Jean Cunningham. That one is better, but really aimed at people with very small gardens & raised beds. The Hobbyist with a capital H. Sally Jean freely admits to purchasing all or most of her plants and the descriptions and garden plans she provides lead me to believe that she grows something on the order of 8 tomato plants and a couple of peppers rather than the 100 or so 'maters and as many peppers that will find a home on my hilltop. My garden is big enough that my daughter is thinking about designating the place as a farm

Beyond that, I am not sure how valid some of her "companions" are for anyone other than herself. As an example, she claims that peppers and tomatoes make wonderful companions because "they are in the same family and like the same conditions." I raise mostly hotter chile rather than green peppers and I have not found them to "like the same conditions" as the tomatoes at all. Rather the opposite in fact. They like things much dryer than the tomatoes do .

I am also not entirely sure that I am interested in mixing a bunch of perennial herbs and self-sowing flowers into my vegetable patch, a core recommendation of Cunningham's - especially in light of the fact that we have plenty of natural habitat bordering the garden area.

All that said, I do intend to plant a basil between each two tomatoes and am starting a ton of marigolds & nasturtiums of the climbs/roams everywhere smelly sort. I'm also going to put the tomatoes a bit closer than I did last year. Last year I left 3 full feet between plants and 5 feet between rows because I intended to let the plants sprawl. That wasted a lot of space that I could have utilized had I done things differently. And I have seen an idea on the front of the Johnny's catalog that I intend to put to use - mixed lettuces broadcast planted into a strip that looks to be 1.5-2 feet wide, something that can be comfortably straddled. You put one foot on either side while you work down the row harvesting. I'm going to copy that for most of our greens.

Frankly, I am not the least bit sure that I saved either time or money by not staking or caging the tomatoes. All that newspaper & straw took nearly forever to spread around (I ended up having to call in the calvary for a few extra hands), I still had to hoe and had lots & lots of weeds, and the straw was not cheap. It also seemed to provide the ideal habitat for a bug nursery. The bugs truly enjoyed my tomatoes - they ate well over half of them.

This year I am going to give the new olive green film mulch developed over at University of New Hampshire a whirl. It supposedly raises soil temps as much as clear plastic does while simultaneously screening out the light wavelengths that lead to weed growth. I'm also going to use row covers. I want to try putting out the tomatoes around May 15 (last expected frost date in my neck of the woods) rather than waiting until June 1. For that matter, I might try a few of the cold-hardy sorts like SubArctic as early as May 1 with the film mulch, and row cover. (Yes, I intend to keep a full back-up set of baby 'maters around just in case!)

If I can convince people to drink anything out of 2 liter bottles I might go so far as to make home-made Wall'o'waters for some of the earliest plants. That idea did come from Cunningham's book. You take a dozen or so and duct-tape them together into a ring. (Tape goes on both the outside and the inside.) Put the thing over the plant you want to protect and fill all of the bottles with water. I suspect that idea would work every bit as well with 1-liter bottles instead of the 2.

Last - or maybe first - on the list is I am going to run up the hill to Ace hardware and drag home a gigantic roll of 6 mil black plastic to blanket a good stretch of the field with the second the snow is off, in hopes that I can kill off all of the weeds before planting time. Come the time I'm ready to plant I'll just fold that chunk of plastic back up and stash it in the shed for next year. The chunk of field I'm using for spring vegetables obviously won't get the black plastic treatment until next year, when I've moved them somewhere else.
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Old January 19, 2008   #4
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All that newspaper & straw took nearly forever to spread around (I ended up having to call in the calvary for a few extra hands),

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Granny, you must have a special exclusive pipeline to be able to call in the calvary. Most of us would have called in the cavalry.

I love your posts and you say you don't live that far from me here in the NE so why not consider driving over and visiting if it isn't too far.

As for me, I've explained here about my past experiences with companion planting after buying and reading Louise Riotte's book referred to above. And that was many many years ago b'c that book has been around a long time. My own experiences, using controls to see the possible effects of companion planting did not encourage me to pursue it. For others it might work out, but not me.
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Old January 19, 2008   #5
orflo
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There is a very good chapter in Elliot Coleman's book: the neworganic grower (it's in fact written for a farm like granny has), he sows in different leguminosae in between the crops, for instance clovers in a patch of squash. The clovers provide the nitrogenes the squash likes and suppress a bit of the weeds (theoretically). That is just the way the ancient 'three sisters' configurations was done: the mais took the necesssary nitrogen from the beans, as did the squash,
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Old January 19, 2008   #6
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I am willing to try anything. I plan on planting oregano to deter cucumber beetles. I also am planting dill to attract something LOL I think it was a bug to kill the white flies. All I know is I made a mental note, more dill.
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Old January 19, 2008   #7
blatanna
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There is a lot of advice on the website garden companions. Personally i always plant aaatagates and Calundula among my tomatoes to keep greenfly and white fly at bay. I plant a couple fo garlic cloves at the base of my rose bushes and always surround the beds with poached egg plant to encourage all the good insects towards my crops. Can't say for sure if it really works but have'nt had green or whitefly on my toms so to me its worth it.l
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Old January 19, 2008   #8
barkeater
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I found the "Carrots Love Tomatoes" book worthless too when I read it some 20 years ago. The only good companion plant is no companion plant, as anything planted too close competes for nutrients, which makes it a weed .

And the ability of a certain plant to deter harmful flying insects from the one you want to grow is also a dubious claim. However, planting something even more highly desirable to insects than the one you want to grow, namely a trap crop, does work.
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Old January 19, 2008   #9
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Plant petunias in among your corn rows and at
the end of the rows to keep worms out of the
cobs.
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Old January 19, 2008   #10
celestina
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Rena--might be good to keep dill away from the tomatoes since I've found tomato horn worms love it. Makes a good trap crop though
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Old January 19, 2008   #11
Granny
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rena View Post
I am willing to try anything. I plan on planting oregano to deter cucumber beetles. I also am planting dill to attract something LOL I think it was a bug to kill the white flies. All I know is I made a mental note, more dill.
Rena, oregano is a perennial and it spreads like mint does. If you are going to plant it in your regular garden, then I would suggest that you put it in a great big pot and bury the pot in the ground. That way you will confine the oregano and can move it if you should want to down the road.

The same goes for most of the herbs other than dill, coriander/cilantro, parsley & basil.
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Old January 19, 2008   #12
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I attended a stream pollution workshop last summer and was talking to one of the presenters during a break and the subject of tomatoes came up, imagine that; he actually did his Phd thesis on this subject. I think if you google "do tomatoes love basil", you can find it; if I remember correctly he planted tomatoes and basil in varying degrees of proxmity and recorded the result of those closest to those farther away.
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Old January 19, 2008   #13
Granny
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Originally Posted by carolyn137 View Post

I love your posts and you say you don't live that far from me here in the NE so why not consider driving over and visiting if it isn't too far.
Thanks Carolyn! I enjoy yours too. Sorry about spelling cavalry incorrectly - at 2:30 in the morning the spell checker does the spelling for me. I do wish the every other day snow would stop so that I can get a decent night's sleep. (I have severe nerve damage from an old injury - kicks up fits when the air pressure changes.)

I just checked Google and you are only a spit and a stone's throw over the hill. I only have to make one turn after I leave the driveway, hahaha! I never realized you were so close by, Carolyn! Under 60 miles. I would love to come visit one of these days soon!

I agree with you about seeing proof and using controls re the companion planting. Cunningham states now and then that there is "evidence" that a particular combo works, but nowhere can I find her actually foot-noting or otherwise specifying what those proofs might be.

If these were medical studies or chemistry I could lay hands on them in less than a heart beat. Anyone know where they hide the botany?
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Old January 19, 2008   #14
Granny
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Originally Posted by kygreg View Post
I attended a stream pollution workshop last summer and was talking to one of the presenters during a break and the subject of tomatoes came up, imagine that; he actually did his Phd thesis on this subject. I think if you google "do tomatoes love basil", you can find it; if I remember correctly he planted tomatoes and basil in varying degrees of proxmity and recorded the result of those closest to those farther away.
I think this would be the study you are referring to - reading it now:
http://orgprints.org/6614/01/6614.pdf
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Old January 19, 2008   #15
Rena
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Originally Posted by celestina View Post
Rena--might be good to keep dill away from the tomatoes since I've found tomato horn worms love it. Makes a good trap crop though
LOL It may have been for my tomato bisque or making pickles with
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