Over the next twelve months we will be visiting with 12 gardeners from all over Texas. They will be sharing some of the knowledge that allows them to garden successfully in our beloved, but climatically challenging state. I have a masters degree in horticulture and I have gardened for years. However, most of my gardening knowledge came from visits with other gardeners. I hope these monthly visits will provide you, and me, with a few tips and tricks that will help us all become better gardeners.
Our first gardener is Harry Cabluck. Harry gardens in the back yard of his central Austin home. While his garden is not the biggest I have ever seen, it is one of the neatest and most well managed gardens that I have ever been in. Harry was gardening organically long before it was “cool”. He collects rainwater for irrigation, makes tons of compost, has the nicest cold frame I have ever seen and grows tomatoes from seeds (click here to read how Harry grows his tomato transplants) and then grafts them onto other tomatoes that he has grown from seed.
Harry gives his beloved tomatoes a head start by growing them in an ingenious cage method that he developed. As early in March as he can, Harry plants the tomatoes he started in January in his neatly bordered beds that are extremely well worked with compost. He then takes a 55 gallon trash can liner, splits the end and bunches it around the tomato plant. Then he uses his heavy duty cages to anchor the the trash bag in place. To keep his trash bag liner secured to his cage he uses an ingenious string and rubber band fastener that is incredibly effective and easy to use. With bags in place he is able to easily pull the bags up over his frame at the earliest sign of cold weather, high winds or heavy rain. I was so impressed with this cage method that I seriously considered changing the way I grow tomatoes! Now let’s hear more from Harry:
Name: Harry Cabluck
Location: Central Austin. **City garden of three 100-sq. ft. raised beds. We rotate a plot holding 12-15 tomato plants a year.
Years gardening: 43+. First gardened as a child in late 1940’s. My mother had a green thumb and a source for manure, as her father was a dairy farmer. As an adult we have had small plots in Dallas and larger plots in Pittsburgh, Pa., and Columbus, Ohio. We made good use of our Troy-Bilt 6 hp rototiller. Often improved the soil in these gardens by importing soil, manure and/or spoiled hay.
Years in this plot: 20. **Our backyard was once the corral area for a nearby home. When we moved in it was black gumbo clay that would hold ankle-deep water for a few days after each rain. De-ionized the soil with gypsum. Built multiple compost piles 20-feet long before starting to plant in 1995.
Favorite crop: Tomatoes. Usually start 60 seeds in trays under lights in the garage in January. This is the first year to use LED’s instead of T-5 or fluorescent lights. Hope to yield 36 heirloom/hybrids along with 18 rootstock for grafting. After starts in trays become root bound, transplant to four-inch pots. Some 12-15 pots stay under lights, the remaining pots are moved to the cold frame. Sometimes need to run an extension cord and heating pad to cold frame. Usually give away the tomato plants that are not planted in our garden. Crop rotation includes basil, green beans, arugula, spinach, marigolds. January crops include greens, carrots, elephant garlic, shallots, gumbo onions. Would like to attempt parsnips. Have never had good luck with sweet peas.
Best tips: Make good garden dirt.
Compost!!! This year’s compost pile of ground leaves, mixed with kitchen scraps, cottonseed meal, bat guano and molasses, seems to be the best ever. In previous years used cooked barley malt (byproduct of brewery) mixed with coffee chaff (byproduct of air roasting). That stuff needed to be turned at least once daily, as it would putrefy.
Although not necessary, we get great results using our cold frame and 800-gallon rainwater catchment. A two-inch rain on our 20X20-foot garage roof will fill the tank. It is usually empty around July 4.
Make use of store-bought soil for seed-starting and transplanting. Happy Frog brand seems best. Don’t waste time and money on cheap tomato cages. Read Bill Adams’, “Texas Tomato Lover’s Handbook.”
Pest control: Havahart traps for varmints. For bugs, mix a one-gallon cocktail containing 50-squirts Tabasco, one ounce of liquid seaweed, one ounce molasses, one ounce fish emulsion, dash of dishwashing liquid…when necessary add BT. I love my Hudson sprayer.
Weed control: We control weeds by cultivating and mulching regularly. **Best stuff seems to be wood chips. Long-tined rake, six-inches wide, four tines.
Biggest challenge: Thwarting the squirrels and leaf-footed bugs. **Would like to have a moveable pergola, because a hoop house is always a challenge to erect and doesn’t look good.
Favorite amendment: Cottonseed meal AND anything with trace elements…especially glauconite, WHICH seems to help blossoms set fruit in heat and cold.
Do we preserve: No. **Not large enough garden, small yields.
Favorite advice: Have a good friend who has great ideas. ***Thanks to Tom Lupton.
What would you like to do better? Would like to learn more about tomato biology. How to ensure more tomato blossoming and fruit set and how to improve brix.
Thanks for the writeup. Hope this will inspire others to garden. And other gardeners to participate in the interviews…..Forgot to mention the price of $1,000.00 tomatoes….that’s my cost per tomato. harry.
Thanks so much for helping us do this! Based on hits I think people are really liking it!
I love your garden, Harry – it is so organized and tidy and you make great use of your space. Thanks for sharing your experience with the rest of us. And good luck with the upcoming tomato season!
Oops! Favorite amendment: Cottonseed meal. AND anything with trace elements…especially glauconite, WHICH seems to help blossoms set fruit in heat and cold.
Made the correction!
Love the garden cage / rubber band – string idea! Soooo clever! I feel your pain when it comes to trying to keep tomatoes pollinating later in the season. This year I’m trying shade cloth although I think ambient temperature is ambient temperature and may not make much of a difference. I’ve also started growing most of my tomatoes from Italy since their country is mostly all Zone 8 & 9. Love the garden visits feature. I agree, we learn MORE from each other. Happy Gardening.
Great idea to grow tomatoes from Italy! Thanks for sharing!
You’re welcome! Grow most of my vegetables from Seeds from Italy … have been doing that for several years now. growitalian.com Can’t say enough good things about their seeds.
Question … Does Harry grow “marigolds” for insect protection or because he likes the flower? I’m trying them this year for nematodes and wondering if anyone has had success doing the same? I’ve tried planting them as a rabbit deterrent, and it didn’t work… In fact, I could post a photo of the rabbits EATING the marigolds and sending me a thank you note afterwards! 🙂
I will ask him but my guess is he does it for nematode control or maybe leaf footed bug control. I have a post where I tried this for a season to keep away the leaf footed bugs. Based on my experiment, and some of what I have read, I believe that planting marigolds and tomatoes may have some minimal benefits but it is not substantial. I had not heard about using them to repel bunnies though. Very interesting. I bet the pic of the bunny eating them is pretty cute!
Marigolds are grown so the seed/blossoms can be torn apart and scattered all over the tomato plants. Terrible thing to do to the flowers, but they keep producing blossoms. The scattered seeds that linger in the tomato leaves (perhaps) act as an insecticide. So far so good with the battle against root-knot nematodes. Majority of tomatoes planted are grafts. The cover crop in the past has been crimson clover. This year one plot was sown with elbon rye and red (?) clover. Today, Jan. 30, that plot was trimmed with a weed-eater, lightly soaked, sprinkled with wettable sulphur, and covered with black plastic. Perhaps too soon to solarize, but the weeds were growing better than the rye and clover. Hope this helps. harry.
Harry, I am overwhelmed with your gardening expertise–so much so that I shared Ellen’s FB post and added a foreword regarding your professional life, which I am certain my friends will find interesting. Thank you for all you have contributed and are still contributing to this world!