Viewing post #1077145 by HoosierHarvester

You are viewing a single post made by HoosierHarvester in the thread called Dwarf Tomato Project - who grows them?.
Image
Mar 9, 2016 4:48 PM CST
Name: Kayleigh
(Zone 5a)
Butterflies Seed Starter Plays in the sandbox Lilies Irises Region: Indiana
Canning and food preservation Hummingbirder Daylilies Cut Flowers Cat Lover Vegetable Grower
RickCorey said:

>> and broke the bottom ...

It's awkward unless you can prop up the 2x4 straight upright really sturdily, but you can balance a 2x4 upright, then balance the bucket (upside down) on top of the 2x4. Twiddle and fudge until the 2x4 is exactly under under the spot where you want the hole, and straight upright, then push a nail, chisel or very sturdy knife-point onto the bucket's bottom right over the 2x4.

If everything is lined up straight, when you hammer on the nail or chisel you'll punch a hole instead of knocking the bucket and 2x4 sideways and driving the nail into your knee.

I like the melty methods better, myself!

The thicker the nail, the more heat it will hold.

If you can balance one or two nails on the gas burner, that's good, because you can let the jaws of the pliers cool while the nail(s) re-heat. Also, you can duck out of the way while the globs of plastic burn off the nail and emit clouds of noxious smoke (maybe you could scrape excess plastic off?)

If you have a lot of buckets, maybe keep a glass of water handy to cool the jaws of the pliers.

With a big enough nail, I could melt a "strip" of plastic maybe 1/8" to 1/4" wide, and long enough to have some hole on the bottom, and some hole up the side a little, to let air in even if the bucket sat flat and tight on some surface that did not let air into the bottom of the bucket.

On such a flat surface, I would prop the bucket up on chopsticks or slats or twigs, or some kind of grid or surface with gaps, to get some air-gap between the buckets and the surface.

Let the water out and the air in!

With tall buckets, and especially with fine or very water-retentive potting mixes, I make sure that air has several access points by putting several small holes 1/3rd of the way up, around the sides.


I kind of cheated and did a test today. I wanted to tell folks about it for punching bottom drain holes. Instead of a nail, I used a cheap dollar store phillips screw driver. Worked very well. That way I only had to deal with holding one item, and not worrying about dropping the nail out of the pliers since this is being done in my house and I sure didn't want to burn my vinyl floor. The smell can be very unpleasant though.

I sat my bucket on a large cooking (stock pot) type pan. This worked well also. Until I re-read, I forgot about burning a few holes in the sides. I don't think I'll mind laying it on its side to do that.

« Return to the thread "Dwarf Tomato Project - who grows them?"
« Return to Vegetables and Fruit forum
« Return to the Garden.org homepage

Member Login:

( No account? Join now! )

Today's site banner is by Lucius93 and is called "Erysimum cheiri"

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.