It seems like every season, gardeners have a race to see who can grow the most tomatoes the earliest in the season. Who doesn’t want to post a picture on Facebook of their first tomatoes, especially when they know everyone else’s are puny? This takes a little cooperation from Mother Nature, mostly with warm nights and no late frosts, but I also have a little trick to help you set out your tomato seedlings early, a full 4 weeks before your last frost date. Learn when you can expect your last frost.
Cloches have been used for hundreds years by gardeners and farmers in one form or another. It’s a practice that dates back to the early market gardens in France when farmers used to grow crops in cold temperatures and protect the crops with large, bell-shaped glass jars. Today, any food grade glass or tall, clear plastic container works as a vegetable cloche for home gardeners. It’s also a very thrifty solution. Cloches can be used to protect any type of vegetable seedlings or frost-sensitive annuals. It’s also great at deterring rabbits from nibbling on your plants.
[su_highlight background=”#fffd8c” color=”#000003″]Buy on Amazon: Garden cloche to cover and protect plants.[/su_highlight]
Start those seedlings early, protected with the modified milk jugs, and you’ll be enjoying your tomatoes and other veggies weeks before your neighbors!
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