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Advances in greenhouse technology have made growing flavorful tomatoes year-round easier. And scientists say climate change may soon make it harder to grow delicious tomatoes outdoors in fields.
Learning how to grow tomatoes in water is easy and allows you to harvest fresh-home-grown produce in every season without any mess.
With water in the West scarce, some tomato farmers look to hydroponics The technique grows plants without soil, submerging roots directly into water.
Hydroponic growing is all about marketing, local growers say. Tomatoes are the king crop in hydroponics because of the demand for them in early spring and late fall when field tomatoes aren't ...
When Scott Beylik’s grandfather started the now four-acre Beylik Family Farms in Fillmore in the 1970s, it was a radical idea to grow tomatoes indoors without soil. Back then, they were pioneers of ...
“Imagine if I could grow tomatoes year-round…” I said as I came in from the garden. “One word,” replied my husband Patrick. “Hydroponics.” John at Mr. Hydro in Solana Beach (858-259 ...
Last week a new science was given a new name. Hydroponics, by its foremost U. S. practitioner, Dr. William Frederick Gericke of the University of California. Set out in row's at the ...
Tomato King of Albany owner Jeff Skalicky talks about the process used to grow several varieties of tomatoes and peppers Wednesday in one of the farm's greenhouses near Albany, Minn.
Advances in greenhouse technology have made growing flavorful tomatoes year-round easier. And scientists say climate change may soon make it harder to grow delicious tomatoes outdoors in fields.
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