Hi Everyone
I'm from Dorset and this is my first year of growing anything
I have a 6'x6'x4' Polyethylene Greenhouse in which I'm growing Shirley Tomatoes, Cherry Tomatoes, Aubergine, Chilli Peppers & Sweet Peppers. My lovely Dad bought me 6 plants of each, so it's kind of been a baptism of fire to say the least!
The greenhouse only has a zip up door for ventilation and condensation is a big problem. I've read that prolonged damp in a g/h leads to virus & mould problems, so I open the door every day, for most of the day so it can dry out. Obviously, by doing this, I'm losing heat (of which we've had precious little) but my logic is that cool temperature and heavy condensation is not a good combination, but I'm unsure if I'm doing the right thing? How much condensation is too much?
Also - without fail, every Shirley tomato so far has had cracks in them, and despite much research, it seems many things can be responsible, both under and over watering to name two, so how are you supposed to know? The last 4 weeks in particular my Shirley tomato plant leaves are looking very sick indeed....yellow blotches and curling upwards, and I don't know whether I've underwatered overwatered, underfed, etc., etc, so I'm wondering would it be best to pick the remaining tomatoes and ripen indoors?
My apologies for a long first post, and also if my questions are in the "wrong" place, but I wasn't really sure which section I should ask in
I'm from Dorset and this is my first year of growing anything
I have a 6'x6'x4' Polyethylene Greenhouse in which I'm growing Shirley Tomatoes, Cherry Tomatoes, Aubergine, Chilli Peppers & Sweet Peppers. My lovely Dad bought me 6 plants of each, so it's kind of been a baptism of fire to say the least!
The greenhouse only has a zip up door for ventilation and condensation is a big problem. I've read that prolonged damp in a g/h leads to virus & mould problems, so I open the door every day, for most of the day so it can dry out. Obviously, by doing this, I'm losing heat (of which we've had precious little) but my logic is that cool temperature and heavy condensation is not a good combination, but I'm unsure if I'm doing the right thing? How much condensation is too much?
Also - without fail, every Shirley tomato so far has had cracks in them, and despite much research, it seems many things can be responsible, both under and over watering to name two, so how are you supposed to know? The last 4 weeks in particular my Shirley tomato plant leaves are looking very sick indeed....yellow blotches and curling upwards, and I don't know whether I've underwatered overwatered, underfed, etc., etc, so I'm wondering would it be best to pick the remaining tomatoes and ripen indoors?
My apologies for a long first post, and also if my questions are in the "wrong" place, but I wasn't really sure which section I should ask in
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