When it comes to planting vegetables in the garden, tomatoes are among the most popular choices for any gardener, beginner or experienced, because they are not very difficult to grow, and the taste of tomatoes carefully grown in your own garden cannot be compared to that of store-bought tomatoes.

To plant tomatoes, you won't need many things, but the first thing you need to do, as an essential factor in their optimal growth, is to create fertile soil where you will plant the tomatoes.

Tomatoes can be planted in pots, directly into the ground, in raised beds and are among the few plants that can be introduced into the ground at a very great depth. Once you have chosen a very fertile soil or have put a lot of natural fertilizer in the place where you will plant the tomatoes, all you have to do is decide on the type of tomato you want.

Since you need tomatoes for broth, meals and pickles, it would be advisable to plant several types of tomatoes at first to see which variety grows best in your garden.

After digging the hole and inserting the plant into the ground, apply some organic fertilizer and water abundantly. For the first 10 days after planting, you need to water the plant to make sure it takes root and grows in very good conditions.

If you have watered the plants too much, you will see that the leaves will droop slightly, and if you have watered them too little, you will notice that the soil around them is dry, in which case you need to give them more water.