Rooting hormone is specifically designed to promote root development in cuttings and is not intended for use as a blossom set spray. While it can enhance root growth in plants, it does not contain the necessary hormones or nutrients that would trigger flowering or fruit set. For tomato plants, using a dedicated blossom set spray with appropriate hormones, like gibberellins or auxins, would be more effective in promoting fruit development.
no
no,it is you get used to the tomato juice smell.
no..........if you spray it on the leaves it gets rid on horned tomato worms
Yes he CAN
tomato juice
yes
Garlic pepper tea. Place whole clove of garlic and hot pepper in blender and mix with water to make one gallon of solution. Spray before blossom break and again after blossom close.
well most people shower in tomato juice
Yes,unless you wash yourself in tomato sauce right after
No. You have to bathe in tomato juice! YUCK!
Tomato juice.
This might sound crazy, but give it the same treatment as humans: a bath in tomato juice. If this doesn't work, put tomato juice in a spray-bottle and spray it --- NOT in the eyes! But after, be sure to give your cat a normal shampoo with cat shampoo. This will get rid of the tomato scent, and when she bathes herself she won't get a mouthful of tomato. [Cats hate veggies.]