CARROTS LOVE TOMATOES
A guide to companion planting for healthier plants and bigger harvests from the garden.
 |
Cabbage is helped by aromatic plants such as celery, onion, sage, or?as pictured here? marigolds.
|
By Louise Riotte
RELATED CONTENT
THE HEALTHY PLATE: Recipe for Spiral Pasta with Roasted Pumpkin and Plum Tomatoes...
Country Lore: From fried green tomatoes before frost begins to cherry tomatoes in our salads all th...
Planting an asparagus and strawberry garden bed to last a lifetime....
The unique majesty of the pronghorn, including indigenous regions, attributes and characteristics, ...
A guide to the plants that complement the greens you want to grow in the garden....
The A to Z Guide to Companion Planting for
Healthier Plants and Bigger Harvests
THE MAGIC AND MYSTERY OF companion planting has intrigued
and fascinated men for centuries, yet it is a part of the
gardening world that has never been fully explored. Plants
that assist each other in growing well, that repel insects,
or that even repel other plants are all of great practical
use, but we're just beginning to find out why. In the years
to come I hope scientists, gardeners, and farmers
everywhere will work together to make discoveries that will
prove of great value in augmenting the world's food supply.
Already, companion planting has produced insect- and
disease-resistant fruits, grains, and vegetables, and
experiments are being conducted on weed-resistant
varieties.
A major enemy of the carrot is the carrot fly, whereas the
leek suffers from the leek moth and the onion fly. Yet when
they live in companionship, the strong and strangely
different smell of the partner plant repels the insects so
well that they do not even attempt to lay their eggs on the
neighbor plant. This is why mixed plantings give better
insect control than a monoculture where many plants of the
same type are planted together in row after row.
It's the same with kohlrabi and radishes in their community
life with lettuce. Both are often afflicted by earth flies,
but when the flies get the odor of lettuce they take off.
Even when plants are affected by diseases one can usually
alleviate the situation with a mixed plant culture.
All through this article you will find "what to grow with"
and "what not to grow with." Both are equally
important to gardening success. The following suggestions
for companion planting are only a beginning. Your own
experiments will lead you toward many different pathways
and discoveries.
Asparagus ( Asparagus officinalis
). Parsley planted alongside asparagus gives added vigor to
both. Asparagus also goes well with basil, which itself is
a good companion for tomatoes. Tomatoes will protect
asparagus against asparagus beetles because they contain a
substance called solanine. But if asparagus beetles are
present in great numbers, they will attract and be
controlled by their natural predators, making spraying
unnecessary. A chemical derived from asparagus juice also
has been found effective on tomato plants as a killer of
nematodes, including the root-knot sting, stubby root, and
meadow varieties.
In my garden, I grow asparagus in a long row at one side.
After the spears are harvested in early spring, I plant
tomatoes on either side, and I find that both plants
prosper from the association. Cultivating the tomatoes also
stems weed growth around the asparagus. The asparagus
fronds should not be cut much, if at all, until very late
in the fall, as the roots need this top growth to enable
them to make spears the following spring.
Page: 1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
Next >>