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Growing Tomatoes Upside Down: Fine, But Why?

20170516A
Upside down tomato: notice the plant is vainly struggling to grow upward.

Sure, you can grow tomatoes upside down, with the roots on top and the stems, leaves, flowers and fruits underneath. You can grow almost any plant upside down. There are commercial systems—basically a pot with a hole in the bottom—specifically intended for this type of culture, but you can save a lot by converting a simple plastic bucket into a pot for upside down tomatoes.

All this is quite possible and is not even really surprising. Any plant that gets knocked sideways or even upside down, say in a landslide, will try to survive. By planting a tomato plant upside down, you’re only bringing out its survival instinct.

The question to ask, though, is why? What’s so interesting about growing a tomato upside down?

Curiosity Factor

True enough, there’s curiosity. Cultivating a plant upside down could be an interesting project for a group of students. Or for an adult to try, just once, to see how it works. But otherwise, when you look carefully at the so-called benefits, you’ll find there really aren’t many.

As seen on TV!

Yes, that notice appears in several ads for upside down tomato containers, but since when is a product that appears on television better than a product that’s not seen on TV? Personally, when I see “as seen on TV,” I tend to automatically think the product must be a scam of some sort!

False Advantages

The sellers of these pots claim that a tomato plant grown upside down will have certain advantages. Perhaps, but it’s worth noting that the following benefits, often cited, also apply to any tomato grown in pots as compared to a tomato grown in the ground. The plant does not need to grow upside down to be:

Place a pot of tomatoes upright on a sunny terrace or balcony and all the same benefits apply.

There is even one company that claims that their pot gives you organic tomatoes! Obviously, a plant grown upside down is not “more organic” than a plant grown upright. It will only be organic if you don’t use synthetic pesticides or fertilizers. Organic gardening has nothing to do with a plant’s orientation.

True Advantages

There are two advantages of growing tomatoes upside down:

Disadvantages

Tomato grow upside down in a bucket: less expensive that a commercial upside down tomato pot. Thomas Kriese, Flicker

What you are not told is that:

Totally Bogus Claims

Some advertisements make totally bogus claims.

That’s nonsense, of course. Container-grown tomatoes, whether upside down or right side up, tend to have fewer insect and disease problems than tomatoes grown in the ground, but still, pesticides may still be needed.

This suggests that water and minerals move through plants by the force of gravity, but that simply isn’t true. Xylem tissues carry sap from cell to cell, largely by a combination of capillary action and evapotranspiration. Gravity is not a major factor and sap doesn’t flow downward faster than it flows upward.

That’s pure fantasy. How the fruit is oriented doesn’t change its size or taste.

Note that the three claims mentioned above were from ads on the websites of Chinese manufacturers. I suspect that consumer protection laws are much less rigorous in China than in the West!

Not Even a New Concept

If you think these inverted pots are a state-of-the-art idea, you’re wrong. People have been experimenting with growing plants upside down since the days of the hanging gardens of Babylon more than 2000 years ago. Commercial pots designed for growing tomatoes upside down have been around for a long time too, probably at least 30 years. One company claims to have sold more than 10 million of these pots and that simply doesn’t happen overnight.

The End Result

Most gardeners who buy such a pot are very enthusiastic at first and ready to recommend it to anybody. Yet if you come back three years later, you’ll generally see that they have abandoned this way of growing tomatoes and that the pot has been stored away somewhere, never to be used again.

Upside down tomatoes: much ago about nothing!

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