hi, i have had an awesome garden for years, all organic, mostly from seed i saved myself. sorry, but i was told that miracle gro is awful for tomato plants, that you get big bushy plants with a lot less fruit. use fish emulsion , bury the tomato plant with at least half the stem in the hole, roots will grow along it. or seaweed, coffee grounds, compost, something like that. you can do a soil analysis pretty easy, they have little kits at home depot or wherever. but chances are your soil is good enough. i strongly advise you to use some kind of mulch or fabric, or the thing will be a chore. i used garden fabric in rows and put some newspaper between the plants, it fit perfectly. either dig it up or make a raised bed. i wish i had a raised bed too. i would do lettuce there and things like that that are such a pain to wash and stay smaller. anyway, i could go on forever. there is a lot to learn, but you dont have to learn it all to get started. grow what you eat. check out your local cooperative extension, they probably have a gardening website that is custom to your area. gardenweb.com is a great website. i am all about stress free gardening, and every year i fix the things that annoyed me last year. i have found that the best thing is to lay down a soaker hose, attached to a timer, and its all automated. you will have to play with the amount/timing of watering. the best time to water is early or later. not the hottest part of the day. ...you can plant some basil with the tomatoes if you use it, they grow nicely together. you can put some marigolds in there for bugs. or mint. herbs are great. mint will spread like crazy, you can just bury the pot. you will have to stake the tomatos, some of them get really big. it will say on the package/stake. this year im using the posts from our old stockade fence.in tx i bet you can grow beautiful lavender. i keep trying, and its ok. but they love hot and dry. i would grow a ton of it if i could... anyway, ill talk gardening with you any time :) have fun