Tamatoe question? if i grow my own tamatoes, will is grow with salamanala in...

if i grow my own tamatoes, will is grow with salamanala in it?
and how is the best route to take care of tamatoe plants
they need lots of sun and i have a sneaking suspicion that that you should be fine with growing your own tomatoes. my nieghbor grows them in her garden and i only pick them and eat them so they should be fine as they are
Home grown tomatoes generally do not get salmonella. The tomatoes aren't gone on the plant or in the soil long enough to hold any kind of salmonella penetrate the skin of the fruit. Also, they are usually eat right away and not left to sit around in warehouse or trucks to ripen. Make sure you wash them well and you should be fine.

They inevitability lots of sun and water. Make sure you are picking the suckers off. They are the small leaves that grow surrounded by the "Y" of the branches. If left to grow, they will take away from your yeild.
Answers:    You CAN grow your own tomatoes and no, unless you introduce salmonella to your tomatoes, you won't get hold of it. Some good hand wash would be in order and if you use compost (and every tomato grower I know does) the compost should be extremely well rotted.

ANY kind of animal sewage needs to be completely composted and then applied on the ground months (I similar to 6 months or more) before growing vegetables in that ground.

I enjoy a few tips for tomatoes that I just wrote a few days ago. I'm not finished just even so but I think you could use the advice so here is a cooperation to the UN-finished page:

http://home.att.net/~ekyorigins/toms.htm...
NO.your tomatoes will be fine. Salmonella is from contaminated water which is used to water the plants. Tomato plants are terribly easy to take safekeeping of. Water when needed. Tomatoes need direct sun at least 6-8 hours a afternoon. You also need to look for tomato bugs, and destroy them when you find them. If not they will devour your plant. They look like big green caterpillars. The best time to find them is early morning formerly it gets hot. I believe salmonella is coming from the water explicitly being used to water the plants - it is despoiled somehow (or unhygienic pickers).

You will be OK growing your own. Stake your plants, fertilize, lots of sun and water. Pick rotten all the bugs, if you get a fungus you call for to spray. That's about it!
no it won't enjoy salminila, and plenty of water! they have a entry you can buy online to savely grow stuff like an indoor greenhouse or something
I don't think it will grow with samonella contained by it but you do have to water them and cart good care of them.


http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;...
here is no such thing as a "tamatoe", nor is there anything call "salamanela".

But if you are really talking about tomato plants and salmonella, no you own nothing to worry more or less.

Buy organic tomato plant starts and keep them resourcefully watered and in a nice sunny location and you will have glowing plants.
They are easy to grow. Water them occasionally and put them surrounded by the sun in good soil ahd the tomatoes will grow powerfully. You need the ability to spell tomato previously you can do all of the above
if you qrow your own it shouldn't have salmonella contained by it unless you did somethinq to it. just qrow naturally next to no enhancers or what so ever. that should make it safe. adjectives it would need is plenty of sun and water. and logically when your tomato plant bears some tomatoes wash it economically :] Learn to spell please. And no they will not as long as you grow them properly. And the best way to care for them, is to hose every day, and use wire or chicken rope to keep the plants upright. And formulate sure the tomatoes do not spoil. Tomato.
i d k .

but it's tomatoes or tomatos .lol . i think tomatoes
Salmonella comes from a microbes that somehow got into the soil. That wont happen surrounded by home gardens. Tomatoes need at least 5 hours of full sun and be kept moist. They involve to be watered regularly but not drowned. NO it is introduced in the harvesting process(washing bins gain contaminated) the ones you grow yourself will not have salmonella
you know tomatoe is a fruit! just wipe up them good, no worries.