Christine Coker, LSU AgCenter vegetable specialist, says you can use pretty much any container for growing tomatoes. Even this 5-gallon bucket will work — just be sure to drill holes in the bottom for drainage. Photo by Olivia McClure/LSU AgCenter
Celano is a tomato variety that does well in hanging baskets. Photo by Olivia McClure/LSU AgCenter
When planting tomatoes, bury them deeper than you would other vegetable transplants. Photo by Olivia McClure/LSU AgCenter
Fresh, homegrown tomatoes are as much a symbol of summertime as pool days, ice cream and backyard barbecues. If you don’t have a lot of space for gardening, you may have resigned yourself to missing out on the refreshing flavor of a ripe, just-picked tomato you grew yourself.But Christine Coker, LSU AgCenter vegetable specialist, said you don’t need a huge yard to successfully grow a...