Read posts about tomatoes

March 14

Something I have noticed: (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

Most of the time, when they speak about hydroponic gardens, greenhouses, growing plants in lunar colonies, and so on... they speak about tomatoes. Recently I read yet another "growing plants in space" article which mentions they now have found that hardy cyanobacteria can grow in lunar soil.

Lunar soil is inhospitable to plants because many of the nutrients it contains are locked up in tough minerals that the plants cannot break down. "It will not be able to support the growth of tomatoes" or other food plants, says Igor Brown of NASA's Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston, Texas, US.

Now, for me, tomatoes aren't that great as a main staple. They are nice in a sauce, but only with a grain product like pasta (which also requires eggs) or bread. Also, I would imagine a plant like a tomato has too much "waste" product: stems and leaves. People also forget how poisonous tomato stems and leaves are; they are a relative of the nightshade family of plants, which include eggplants, potatoes, peanuts, and the deadly poinsettia.

I would want a plant that is mostly edible, like carrots, onions, radishes, lettuce, celery, beets, and so on. Make the most of what we are growing per square inch.

Then I think of all the other stuff we need like salt, protein, sugars, and complex carbohydrates that rabbit food simply won't give us. I am sure we can create salt if we have the right minerals, and maybe we could use soy protein, but how long would a space farer last in such an isolated environment? Posted in: cyanobacteria , moon , science , tomatoes
May 22

I'm a mur-diddly-der-er! (Never melts (meef)) by jen



I've had an interest in growing vegetables for a long time, at least since we bought this house. But we have tons of weird bugs... and rabbits.. and deer... and did I mention bugs? So it never happened. But recently I have been thinking there's not as much harm in doing it in a smaller pot.. and then if it worked out and when I got more experience I could do it in the ground. I would love to grow everything we eat... and make my own tomato sauce too. And cook with fresh herbs. How cool would that be?

So last weekend we picked up a big pot and a couple cherry tomato plants, and I planted them and watered them and got attached to the little guys. The next morning L was curious so I explained they were little tomato plants and when they got bigger they'd make tomatoes that we could eat. This went over well, as the girl would eat a whole package of tomatoes if I let her. She even called them "baby 'mato plants."

And then as it was, I left them on the deck alone for a few minutes while I did something inside, only to come outside to see 2 children, 2 sand rakes, leaves all over the place, dirt all over the place, and nothing much left of my poor baby mato plants...

Hopefully I can find some started plants since it's probably too late to work with seeds.

Sigh. Posted in: kids , pictures , tomatoes