Spikes/Horns Coming from tomato plant stem?
alexlock85
14 years ago
Featured Answer
Sort by:Oldest
Comments (6)
archerb
14 years agoRelated Professionals
Summit Landscape Architects & Landscape Designers · Bellefontaine Neighbors Landscape Contractors · Bound Brook Landscape Contractors · Clayton Landscape Contractors · Hampton Bays Landscape Contractors · La Vista Landscape Contractors · Milford Landscape Contractors · Soddy Daisy Landscape Contractors · Martinsville General Contractors · Milford General Contractors · Wyomissing General Contractors · Boone Decks, Patios & Outdoor Enclosures · Hendersonville Decks, Patios & Outdoor Enclosures · Olathe Decks, Patios & Outdoor Enclosures · Owings Mills Decks, Patios & Outdoor Enclosuresanney
14 years agoalexlock85
14 years agoalexlock85
14 years agoKat Starcher
4 years ago
Related Stories
GARDENING GUIDESSmall Carpenter Bees Are Looking for a Home in Your Plant Stems
Provide flowers and nesting sites in your garden for this beautiful, tiny, metallic blue wild bee — your plants will thank you
Full StoryEDIBLE GARDENSSummer Crops: How to Grow Tomatoes
Plant tomato seedlings in spring for one of the best tastes of summer, fresh from your backyard
Full StoryLIFEKitchen Traditions: Tomato Season Meets a Family Legacy
Somewhere a Sicilian great-great-grandmother is smiling at a bowl of American-made sauce
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDESBeautiful Flowers and Foliage From Dedicated Backyard Gardeners
From lawn daisies to topiaries, Houzz users share their backyard beauties
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDESGreat Design Plant: Blazing Star
Attract birds, bees and butterflies to your garden with the unique flower spikes of Liatris from July to September
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDESDon’t Let These Excuses Keep You From Gardening
Stop blaming your lack of experience, space, time and funds, and get on with the joy of garden making
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDESGreat Design Plant: Salvia Leucantha
Soft, velvety purple spikes gracefully arch over the gray-green foliage of Mexican bush sage in spring through fall in western U.S. gardens
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDESGreat Design Plant: Liatris Aspera
Tall blazing star’s unique flower spikes bring butterflies and bees to eastern U.S. gardens in early autumn
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDESGreat Design Plant: Penstemon Parryi
Drought-tolerant Parry’s penstemon greets spring with pink flowering spikes that delight passersby and hummingbirds alike
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDES12 Edibles Perfect to Plant in Late Summer
Keep those homegrown vegetables and greens coming well into fall
Full StorySponsored
More Discussions
digdirt2