News

Hydroponic Tomatoes May One Day Be Tastier Than Ones Grown Outside : The Salt Advances in greenhouse technology have made growing flavorful tomatoes year-round easier. And scientists say climate ...
Hydroponic farming — the technique Beylik farms with — uses as little as 10% of the water traditional systems use to grow tomatoes and other field crops. “We’re pretty precise.
When Scott Beylik’s grandfather started the now four-acre Beylik Family Farms in Fillmore in the 1970s, it was a radical idea to grow tomatoes indoors without soil. Back then, they were pioneers of ...
Hydroponic gardening may sound like a high-tech commercial endeavor, but it’s a method used by wholesalers and homeowners alike. There are many good reasons to grow tomatoes in water: ...
Tomatoes grow at MightyVine Tomatoes, a hydroponic tomato farm in Rochelle, on March 23, 2016. Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune Bee boxes help pollinate the tomato plants on March 23, 2016, at ...
HATTIESBURG, Miss. (AP) - Beth Tucker has been around farming all her life. But adapting to today’s technology has helped Tucker grow better products year-round. Tucker, 55, of the Dixie ...
Late snow and bitter cold have stifled progress in the fields, leaving us weeks away from field-grown tomatoes. Lucky for us, beautiful, locally grown hydroponic tomatoes will be available long bef… ...
Hydroponic growing is all about marketing, local growers say. Tomatoes are the king crop in hydroponics because of the demand for them in early spring and late fall when field tomatoes aren't ...
Come July, near the end of their growing season, the heirloom tomato vines at Sanford’s Waterkist Farm, can top out at lengths of up to 40 feet, monstrous horizontal stalks that end up victim… ...
Is it a crime to eat a tomato in March? Not if it’s grown locally without insecticides or herbicides, like these hydroponic greenhouse specimens from Washington County’s Shushan Valley Hydro Farm.
Advances in greenhouse technology have made growing flavorful tomatoes year-round easier. And scientists say climate change may soon make it harder to grow delicious tomatoes outdoors in fields.