 So here we are at day 40 for the Arrowroot Tiny Tim Tomatoes. It is time to mix up some new nutrient water, do some pruning, get these flowers ready for pollination. So let me show you the first 40 days. So the first thing I'm going to get planted up here for you today is some tomatoes. So my Arrow garden is about four years old and when you first purchase one you get some special growing pods that fit into these plastic holders. You get some miracle grow nutrients that you add to the water whenever it tells you to. But of course I used all those up that first year of growing and now rather than ordering replacement pods and nutrients, I've kind of come up with a way of using my other hydroponic type items and modifying them so that they work in the Arrow garden. So I've got my rock wall shoved into this container. I've got it soaking in water to get a bunch of moisture built up in there, and then I'm just going to put it into the Arrow garden. These two and put some of my Tiny Tim seeds in there. The other ones that I want to get started, I will use the rock wall again, and I just have these little plastic shot glasses that kind of hold them and keep them steady. We'll plant some seeds up into these. Make sure you're right on here what they are. And then we can just set them up here under the lights once we get everything planted. This works as a great seed starter. You can fit quite a few in here to start with. Of course once these tomato plants get growing and spreading then you'll lose that area. But I'm going to take advantage of it now when we're starting our seeds and use this as a seed starter. So I'm going to put two Tiny Tim tomato seeds into this in case one doesn't germinate. You can see that? So before I start doing some pruning here, I'm going to refresh the nutrients in the Arrow garden here. I've mixed up a new batch of nutrients using the root farm here. I've got part one base, part two veggies, and I'm just mixed it up at the mature growth stage. So it's 10 mils of each of these in my jug. I think these are getting to the mature growth stage now that they're producing flowers and pretty soon they're going to start having tomatoes growing on here. So I think a new boost of nutrients will be really good for this plant. So I'm just going to disconnect the top here, which is pretty cool because you can really see the all the roots here and we're just going to dump out the water here reservoir and refresh it with some new nutrients. So you can easily disconnect the reservoir here by unplugging the cord at the back and I'll just go dump it out. So if you ever have grown any of these vegetables using the cracky method or using an Arrow garden like this, just take a smell of the roots. They smell so good. The tomato roots smell just like fresh tomatoes. The cucumber roots smell like cucumbers. It's it's really cool. So always take some time to smell the roots because they're so nice and refreshing. So not everyone prunes their Arrow root tomatoes that I've seen, you know, watch different videos. But I think it's just a good idea to kind of cut back some of this extra foliage that's, you know, using up some of the nutrients and really not serving any purpose. So I kind of just look through my plant here. I see I got a big long piece here that is kind of at the base. So I'm just going to snip it off. I'm just kind of have a look under there to see if there's other new growth happening. And I can see that, you know, down here, there's some more blooming coming. So this is going to kind of open it up a little bit, let some of the light get there. A little more airflow. If you have a look at the back of the plant here, we got some big pieces coming out that I think the plant can do without. So I'm going to snip them away. You can see there is a little bit of suckering happening on this one. So I've removed this big piece. And then we have another one here with some blooms and where I cut away that big piece. There's some little sucker coming here that I think is going to be shooting out some flowers as well. Just try not to shock the plant too much. I'm going to take one more big piece off here. There's some really beautiful strong stems here on this, this plant. Just give you a little comparison of the two. So this is the one that we just pruned. As you can see, there's lots of room for airflow now. Hopefully all these blooms on here are going to really take off and produce some nice cherry tomatoes. We'll just give this one a little bit of a haircut too now. Okay, so you can see all the pieces that I've cut away from my two tiny tins here. They're looking a lot smaller, but you know, I think they'll be a lot healthier now. A lot more airflow going through. We will keep an eye on these flowers now and work on doing some manual pollination to them. I'll have a fan running, maybe give them a little shake every few days just to get that pollen moving around and we should have some cherry tomatoes for me. So I hope you enjoyed watching my video on my first 40 days of my Arrow Garden Tiny Tim Tomatoes. And please don't forget to subscribe and hit that notification bell so you can see how these tomatoes develop over the next few weeks. And check out the rest of my indoor growing videos. Thanks for watching.