
Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Tomatoes
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Cooking Notes
- Tomatoes are nutritious and low in calories. One medium-sized tomato provides 57% of the recommended daily allotment (RDA) of vitamin C, 25% of vitamin A, and 8% of iron, yet it has only 35 calories.
- Preserve your harvest to enjoy all year long by canning tomatoes or drying tomatoes.
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Last year (2016) I planted golden pear tomatoes for the very first time. I started them from seeds in mid-march. Early Fall the golden pear tomatoes started producing/well. This year I started them from seeds in house at the end of January with all my other plants. After the last frost, I planted them outside.
I live in Nashville TN, and I container garden. All is going well with my 70 plants (a variety of tomatoes and peppers) with the exception of my golden pears. Two weeks ago my pear tomatoes plants are five feet tall with the first tomatoes starting to ripen and more flowers appearing. Then the heat wave hits. The heat index of 105 degrees hits Nashville. My Golden pears wilt and have started to die. I have cut off all the dead leaves trying to save the plants. My plants are in five gallon container and I water them twice a day. I do not allow them to dry out.
I have heard golden pear tomatoes go dormant in extreme July/August heat. Is this true? If it is true should I pinch all the remaining flowers and tomatoes off and hope the plant will rebound will a fall crop? Do you know of any websites dedicated to these plants? Any help will be appreciated.
Brian
Although there are some heat-tolerant varieties, tomatoes in general do not like temperatures over 90F. They may drop flowers or have other pollination/fruiting problems. It helps to relieve the stress of the plant by providing some shade during the hottest part of the day, such as with shade cloth. It is good that you have kept up with the watering—they need extra water to help them survive the heat. However, it is very important that the water is draining properly, or it will encourage rot. Avoid high-nitrogen fertilizer. Picking fruit can also help the plant redirect its energies to maintaining itself. Heat stress can make the plants more susceptible to disease, signs of which can sometimes be wilting. Check for spots on the leaves, discoloration within the stem, etc. If it is not a disease, it is possible that your plant might recover for a fall crop, but it is hard to predict. Good luck!
I've read each of the blog/"garden journal" and the tomatoes page concerning care/gardening/soil. It doesn't address my problem of having buds/blossoms, but they don't pollinated. Also, they are only about 2' tall, how I determine whether they are indeterminate or determinate at this stage?
If you have lots of tomato flowers but no fruit, it might be caused by inadequate light, too little water or inconsistent watering, too hot/cold (temps above about 75F night/90 day), or not enough pollinators. Too low humidity can also affect pollination; ideal is 40 to 70 percent. If humidity is too low, misting the plant can help pollen to stick. As to indeterminate/determinate: If you don’t know the name of the variety, take a look at the flower clusters. Determinate varieties form flower clusters at the tips of the shoots (a flower cluster will also eventually form at the top of the plant, at which point plant growth stops). Indeterminate plants form flower clusters along the stem.
I'm discouraged by all the factors involved in what is claimed as an "easy" plant to grow. However, I think you nailed it. Here in Houston, the temperatures are getting a bit excessive, and yet they are thriving. They get plenty of light, in the morning, and shade envelopes them from a fence starting at about 1p. I believe they are Roma tomatoes. I water each of them about a pint and a half of water each day. So, can I pretty much determine that I will not be getting any fruit from them this year? Any chance they might put out some product before the first frost in late November?
This year is really my first go at planting a garden myself in years. I grew up tending our garden and enjoying the crops produced. But I didn't want to start out big so only planted a few things. I have I think 8 tomato plants, they are big and look healthy but very few blooms and very few tomatoes. Have picked a few green ones to eat but just not getting fruits like I feel it should. Not sure what to do they get plenty of sun and I water in the evening. Now thats my first issue. I also have okra that have plenty of blooms but not producing the okra, same with my cucumbers and bell peppers and sunflower. My corn is barely 8 inches tall, my carrots never even came up and nothing yet on my green beans. I have several hot peppers and they are producing so not going to be short on canned peppers for making nachos and other things. I know there something I should be doing but don't know what. I just was so excited about being able to enjoy the fresh produce and enjoy them all year by canning my produce. Advice please!!
Tomato plants are wilted. some tomatoes are set on but leaves are wilted. I have tried watering but that doesn't help. There are quite a few walnut trees near, would be affecting them?
If watering deeply hasn’t helped, wilted leaves could be a sign of one of primarily two issues: a fungal infection, such as Verticillium or Fusarium wilt, or walnut toxicity. If your tomatoes are less than approximately 75 feet from the walnut trees, then the latter is likely the cause. In either case, there’s not much you can do aside from planting the tomatoes in a different spot next year.
would want to do better i growing tomatoes so that i can have big harvesting.
I Wanna buy a tool to measure bromine in tomato soil and after many research I found the following. Can you check it and tell if it's a good one ?
Many thanks