I've always had success with vegetable gardens, and have enjoyed laying out small plots, to giant "Art" gardens with beds laid out in geometric designs. Moving to Florida, I discovered that the Sandy Soil doesn't promote the growth of too many vegetables. I found an amazing assortment of heirloom tomato plants at a local nursery a few years ago, spent a bunch of cash, planted them out back, and watched them quickly turn into brown sticks of death. I don't know... theres something about nematodes in the soil... and anyone I've seen actually growing tomatoes has them in pots, or some super expensive Hydro-tub on wheels. I heard about the "Mighty Mato" on a radio program, and checked them out... They are Grafted Seedlings produced by a nursery in Southern California, and shipped all over the country. The root stock is resistant to nematodes, and other soil-borne insects and diseases, and has a fast growing root system that is huge. They graft Heirloom seedlings onto this super root stock, in a "Grafted to order" kind of concept. I've got five plants in the ground right now.... they've been growing for about a month now... they're four feet tall and higher... they're all flowering, and every plant has a few fruits