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Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Tomatoes
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.
Capture the garden-fresh taste of tomatoes all year long! See this helpful post on how to can tomatoes.
Many people also love dried tomatoes, so learn how to dry your own tomatoes here.
See our Best Tomato Recipes Ever!
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Check the soil nutrients. It sounds like you might have too much nitrogen, which can result in lots of leaves and vines, but discourages fruiting. If you think that this might be the case, then choose a fertilizer high in phosphorus and low in nitrogen. (To be sure, test the soil to assess what nutrients your plants will need.) Apply fertilizer at time of planting and then when the first fruit sets; after that, side dress once every 7 to 10 days. Good luck!
Hi
Three weeks we used our home made compost from last year used of fresh vegetables and eggs shells. We spread in a corner of the plot preparing for spring flowers and!! all tomatoes seed have sprout! it is full of beautiful and strong plans of tomatoes. What can we do with them?. At the moment I am transplanting them to individual pots, just in case they do for next year. Can you advice me about this?.
If you have tomato transplants when autumn is almost here, then your choices may depend on your climate. In colder climates, it might be best to bring the tomatoes indoors, if you can set them up in an area where the temperature is warm (daytime between 65 and 85F; nighttime cooler, but not below 55F), and there is lots of sunlight (between 12 and 16 hours; a south-facing window with supplemental grow lights might work). Plant them in 5-gallon containers or larger. Fertilize (after first 2 weeks) and water regularly. If you have indeterminate tomatoes, you’ll need to provide support, as they tend to sprawl; these are best, however, for growing over winter, as they will provide a crop over a longer period than determinates. When flowers form, be sure to tap the branches, to encourage pollen to distribute to other flowers. If you do not have room indoors, you can try to extend the season by placing the tomatoes in plastic tunnels or another season-extension system.
Plants are 10 foot tall and bottom 2 or 3 foot of plant are dried up and are dark brown or black. What's going on!? Thank you.
Hi, Rod, This cold be early blight, typical of very hot weather, or a wilt, which can result from over/under watering. Remove all diseased plant tissue from the ground. Practice crop rotation, or if you grow only tomatoes, do not plant in the same place each year. Space plants farther apart (how much depends on the expected size of the plant, its growth habit). Avoid overhead watering. Fruit might turn red on these plants. If threatened with frost, remove and ripen indoors.
Earlier this year I saw a picture showing tomato plants grown by placing tomato slices in a container. In early June I planted three plum tomato slices into one planter containing Miracle Grow Potting soil. I watered them regularly. Two weeks later I had seedlings. Today I have one large and two medium planters with tomatoes on all plants which are on the deck. We live in NJ, and the plants get adequate sun and shade daily. I water them daily, and they get Miracle Grow plant food as recommended. I'm thrilled with size of the plants, but I'm curious about the tomatoes currently on the plants. Since I planted plum tomato slices, I assumed that's the type that would grow. The plants contain both round and plum shaped tomatoes. What gives? Thanks for your help.
If you grow tomato plants from hybrid seeds, you will get tomato's from either or both of the two original types that where combined to make the hybrid. Sounds like you got lucky. Sometimes you get a plant that doesn't bear fruit.
My tomatoes plants look lush and healthy. They a bearing good sized, firm, beautiful tomatoes. But many of the plants have clusters of moist, shriveled up leaves. Most of these clusters are on the bottom half of the plant. The stems appear healthy, and there are no spots on the leaves. I live in Northeastern PA. Is this the normal progression of tomatoes leaves?
Do the leaves also have mold? Late Blight is a fungal disease that can strike during any part of the growing season. It will cause grey, moldy spots on leaves. This disease will overwinter, so all infected plants should be destroyed.
Will tomatoes grow better if you remove leaves of plants