Biodynamic tomatoes
How to Grow Biodynamic Tomatoes
Gardeners who like the idea of growing tomatoes flavoured with the goodness of the rich earth, seasoned with a little ancient mysticism, and governed by the moon may find a great deal of enjoyment from biodynamic farming.
The very first step in learning how to grow biodynamic tomatoes is, of course, to learn what biodynamic agriculture is and biodynamic gardening tip in the first place. It’s truly a splendid adventure and its beginnings go all the way back to the land of ancient Babylon.
Biodynamic agriculture relies on the belief that a farm is actually one, giant, self-sustaining organism that contains the ingredients to ensure its own health and prosperity.
In other words, the soil is fed by the plants and animals occupying the farm. The soil feeds the plants, which, in turn, feed the animals, which feed the soil, and so on and on. The sun, the rain, and any ground water all work together to induce chemical processes that keep the nutrient cycle flowing.
The cycles of the moon contribute, too. Plants grown for what they produce above ground are planted when the moon is waxing, or growing larger. Plants valued for what happens under ground, such as potatoes, turnips, and carrots, thrive when planted when the moon is getting smaller, during its waning cycle.
How to grow biodynamic tomatoes
Will depends on much more than a sunny spot in the back yard. Unfortunately for most home gardeners, it depends upon lots of parts from animals, too. This is where the mysticism comes into play.
The vitality of the soil is maintained with the regular and rhythmic addition of compost made from freshly fermented animal manure.
To enhance the mineral quality of the soil, fresh cow manure mixed with ground quartz needs to be stuffed into cow horns, which are then buried at carefully prescribed intervals along the ground at the right phase of the moon.
The horns are left buried for several seasons, depending upon the exact mixture with which the horn is stuffed. Once dug up after fermentation in the soil, the contents of the horn are mixed with water, whirled in different directions every other minute for an hour, and then sprayed throughout the garden.
Six medicinal herbs – yarrow, chamomile, stinging nettle, oak bark, dandelion, valerian, and horsetail – are instrumental to the production of biodynamic compost.
Yarrow blossoms must be stuffed into the urinary bladder of a red deer. The bladder must be left in the sun all summer, buried during the winter, and dug back up in the spring before it is allowed to be a part of the concoction sprinkled over the compost heap.
Chamomile flowers stuffed into the intestines of a cow are handled similarly although on a different seasonal schedule.
The other herbs are used in specific ways and schedules, too. Once all the ingredients have ”aged” appropriately, they are combined with water and either stirred into a brewing compost heap or they are sprinkled along the top of it.
Pest and biodynamic tomatoes
One important aspect of how is controlling pests and biodynamic gardening has some specific directions for doing so.
If field mice like your tomatoes as much as you do, just burn their little skins when Venus is in Scopio and sprinkle the ashes alongside your tomato plants. The mice left living will eagerly dine elsewhere.
The moon will help you keep the weeds out of your biodynamic tomato plot. Gather the weed seeds, burn them over a wooden fire, and sprinkle the ashes alongside your tomato plants, and your field mice skin ashes, too, if mice are also a problem. The moon shining on the ashes of your weed seeds will block their ability to grow.
Not only does a thorough understanding of ancient gardening techniques and astrology come into play when you begin to grow biodynamic tomatoes, a lot of space and a lot of animals and other plants are required, too. These elements aren’t available to most gardeners so the best many of us can do is stick with simple organics.
Those of us in the right environment, however, can enjoy quite a celestial biodynamic gardening adventure!
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