It's early June. The tomatoes have taken root and grown. In the greenhouse, the Black Cherry tomatoes require pinching and staking. You can see how we planted the tomato seedlings here: How we planted tomato seedlings in the ground this May.

The video and photos show how I step-son tomatoes.
Weeding is essential. Two days later, since we've disturbed our tomatoes, they need to be fertilized. I used the water-soluble Aquarin vegetable fertilizer through drip irrigation.

Upon closer inspection, I noticed clusters on some of the tomatoes.
Let's move from the greenhouse to the outdoors. Bush tomatoes, planted under lutrasil, look just as good as those in the greenhouse. And they don't require much care.
This variety is determinate and doesn't require pinching, and the black film suppresses weeds, eliminating the need for weeding. In theory, we didn't need to tie them up, but we decided to do so to encourage them to grow.
Tomatoes look like this:
Yes, and of course, they got their share of fertilizer.
Watch for flowers and fruits to appear.


