San Antonio Express-News

Follow these tricks for a better tomato garden

- C.M., via email Heloise Send a money- or time-saving hint to Heloise, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5000, or Email: heloise@heloise.com.

Dear Heloise:

We are well into summer, and as a retired horticultu­ralist, I discovered an amazing trick with tomatoes!

Instead of pulling the suckers off and throwing them away, I wait until they are about a foot-long and then cut them off just after the first leaf.

Then, I stick them in water, and in about 10 hot summer days, you will have another well-rooted tomato for your garden!

Make sure to cut the sucker above the leaf so that another sucker will arise in the crotch of the stem and leaf for your next cutting. I started with 12 plants, and now I am at about 50 plants that are able to be eaten and frozen. I give to my family, neighbors and the impoverish­ed, especially with inflation these days.

Also, don’t throw those ashes away from your fire pit, fireplace or grill! They can be used as pure potash fertilizer to make plants bloom! Put them on your tomatoes, beans, etc., to produce more flowers that will turn into more produce for you.

Dale, Dayton, Ohio

Dear Heloise: Never did I ever in my 83 years think I would write to an advice column. But at 82-and-a-half years old, I discovered that, if I fold a rough bath towel and lay it under me on my bed (I sleep with no clothes), it acts as the perfect back scratcher. Try it; you will like it!

Robert “Bobby” Allen,

San Antonio

Dear Heloise: You recently had a letter from someone looking to remove a garlic odor from their fingers after preparing a recipe. I wanted to add on to the hints about using stainless steel to get rid of the odor.

I take a stainless steel spoon, run it under cold water and then rub my fingers over the spoon. It’s a very simple, quick and effective solution that always works for me. I don’t know why it works, but it does.

Mary-margaret Cortesi, Torrington, Connecticu­t

Dear Heloise: A recent 86-year-old complained that she cannot open the cans with tabs on them. Just use the tip of a spoon to gently lift the tab. Next, slide the handle of the spoon through the hole until it is braced against the edge of the can, opposite of the tab. Then, just raise the spoon.

Dear Heloise: This is Mugsy enjoying his surroundin­gs while on a boat in Long Beach, California. He is a rescue dog from the Laguna Beach Animal Shelter.

Regards, Paul & Sharon Mccarthy

Readers, to see Mugsy and our other Pet Pals, go to Heloise.com and click on “Pet of the Week.” Do you have a furry friend to share with our readers? Send a photo and a brief descriptio­n to Heloise@heloise.com.

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