By
eHow Home & Garden Editor
Difficulty: Moderately Easy
Things You’ll Need:
Step1
Put your best organic attitude to work in growing tomatoes - prevent problems that might tempt you to use synthetic pesticides.
Step2
Select a sunny site that you can water, whether it's a garden bed or a 30-gallon garbage can on the patio.
Step3
Select tomato varieties with a track record of success in your area - nurseries, garden columns and cooperative extension service publications are valuable resources. Grow disease-resistant hybrids and reliable heirlooms (but remember that an heirloom will usually perform better the second season from seeds you have saved yourself).
Step4
Build organic soil to grow great roots, nurture worms and support the big, leafy tops your tomatoes need to ripen lots of fruit. See "eHow to Build Organic Soil" for details.
Step5
Plan to feed your tomatoes with organic fertilizer every other week until they set fruit, then again after each flush of fruit. Use a balanced organic fertilizer that you work into the soil or a fish emulsion in water - their steady release of nutrients makes for the consistent, thrifty growth that is the mark of organic vegetables.
Step6
Provide essential air circulation and distance from soil pathogens by growing mulched tomatoes on tall stakes, in wire cages or attached to a trellis. (Most tomatoes top six feet in height, and crawling on the ground puts them at great risk of soil diseases.)
Step7
Give tomatoes the water they need. To let them wilt between irrigations stresses them and violates the organic strategy of steady growth. Mulch under tomatoes once the soil is warm to keep weeds, soil temperature and water levels moderated and to prevent blossom end rot, which is caused by irregular water availability.
Step8
Take low-impact steps to control insects: encourage beneficial insects, watch for pests, stomp and squish all you can and use physical controls such as hair to repel slugs. For big pest problems, spray or dust with organic controls; for example, use Dipel with hornworms, and soapy water or pyrethrins for aphids and whiteflies.