Hi all 
We did something unusual for us, and ordered some live tomato plants from Burpee. We very much wanted to try the new variety of sauce tomato they brought out this year, but the seeds were sold out early (I guess lots of people liked the look of them) so it had to be plants.
Anyway, plants arrived, we repotted them for a while to bigger containers as we were experiencing some strange late frosts here in Florida.
We have many other tomato plants established in the garden, mostly cherries... as spring progressed, we started to get concerned at all the invasive bugs... mostly japanese beetles... also some little mole things were digging EVERYWHERE... and I decided I don't really want to expose these more expensive, and hopefully super producing tomato plants, to the dangers of our un-tested garden (its our first year in this region of FL)
I looked at straw bale gardening and loved the idea... from book reading I did long ago I figure it must be the extra oxygen to the roots that helps plants grow so well in those. We looked all over for straw bales, and at the local price, the idea was kind of a bust :/
SO, we found some jinormous plastic pots at a sale for a low price. We only found 2 so one tomato plant has to be chanced on the garden... somewhere. I think the pots have plenty of size for even indeterminate tomatoes, at least until we get some harvest off of them. Wont be able to lift the pots tho, LOL.
The next thing is going to be what to fill them with. I have a pastured horse that likes to poop in the sandy dirt, something we had discovered is a huge plus when it came to fertilizing the regular garden. When I take manure that has dried over a few days, it turns into an awesome dust fine matter.. no composting needed... and from the results on some plants in the garden I dont think its too "hot" ... they are really taking off.
He also has a tendency to spread his good hay out and ignore everything over a day old... I was looking at the extensive scattering today with some consternation... then *light bulb* why not put this "straw" he is making, in the pots? It will still provide some air pockets by breaking up the soil matter, especially if it is layered... right?
So here is my plan so far for creating a more natural potting mix... but Im not exactly experienced at this, so please give me any thoughts you may have
)
- "Straw" layers
- Sun-dehydrated dust Manure (about 1/8th of total matter? or more?)
- Peat moss (about 1/4 of total matter?) for moisture retention...
- Sand
- ground Egg shells (calcium)
Any other ideas? I'm trying to keep cost low, and soil natural.. without introducing an overload of bug egg/larvae and whatever else from our 'new' garden... but then I am really new at this.
Do I need to buffer with Lime?
Does my idea sound silly? I'm not trying to make a sterile growing enviroment or anything.. just a semi-controlled one.......

We did something unusual for us, and ordered some live tomato plants from Burpee. We very much wanted to try the new variety of sauce tomato they brought out this year, but the seeds were sold out early (I guess lots of people liked the look of them) so it had to be plants.
Anyway, plants arrived, we repotted them for a while to bigger containers as we were experiencing some strange late frosts here in Florida.
We have many other tomato plants established in the garden, mostly cherries... as spring progressed, we started to get concerned at all the invasive bugs... mostly japanese beetles... also some little mole things were digging EVERYWHERE... and I decided I don't really want to expose these more expensive, and hopefully super producing tomato plants, to the dangers of our un-tested garden (its our first year in this region of FL)
I looked at straw bale gardening and loved the idea... from book reading I did long ago I figure it must be the extra oxygen to the roots that helps plants grow so well in those. We looked all over for straw bales, and at the local price, the idea was kind of a bust :/
SO, we found some jinormous plastic pots at a sale for a low price. We only found 2 so one tomato plant has to be chanced on the garden... somewhere. I think the pots have plenty of size for even indeterminate tomatoes, at least until we get some harvest off of them. Wont be able to lift the pots tho, LOL.
The next thing is going to be what to fill them with. I have a pastured horse that likes to poop in the sandy dirt, something we had discovered is a huge plus when it came to fertilizing the regular garden. When I take manure that has dried over a few days, it turns into an awesome dust fine matter.. no composting needed... and from the results on some plants in the garden I dont think its too "hot" ... they are really taking off.
He also has a tendency to spread his good hay out and ignore everything over a day old... I was looking at the extensive scattering today with some consternation... then *light bulb* why not put this "straw" he is making, in the pots? It will still provide some air pockets by breaking up the soil matter, especially if it is layered... right?
So here is my plan so far for creating a more natural potting mix... but Im not exactly experienced at this, so please give me any thoughts you may have

- "Straw" layers
- Sun-dehydrated dust Manure (about 1/8th of total matter? or more?)
- Peat moss (about 1/4 of total matter?) for moisture retention...
- Sand
- ground Egg shells (calcium)
Any other ideas? I'm trying to keep cost low, and soil natural.. without introducing an overload of bug egg/larvae and whatever else from our 'new' garden... but then I am really new at this.
Do I need to buffer with Lime?
Does my idea sound silly? I'm not trying to make a sterile growing enviroment or anything.. just a semi-controlled one.......