Lots of Flowers, But Not Enough Fruit on Tomato Plants
Are you seeing lots of flowers on your tomatoes but not enough red fruit? From poor pollination to extreme heat, there are many reasons why a lack of fruit happens. Thankfully, most are addressable! Read our article (with video demo) to find out how to get more tomatoes and reap the fruit of your labors.
Lack of Pollination
While other fruiting vegetables like squash produce separate male and female flowers, tomatoes have flowers with both male and female parts. This means they鈥檙e self-fertile and can pollinate themselves. But while that鈥檚 technically the case, you鈥檒l get much better fruit set if pollinating insects 鈥 and especially bumblebees 鈥 enter the mix.
Bumblebees 鈥渂uzz pollinate鈥: Their wings flap up and down at a frequency that creates their famous low, audible buzz鈥揳nd it鈥檚 this buzz that produces a vibration, so that when they visit a flower the pollen is shaken free from the male part to drift down onto the waiting female stigma. We want more bumblebees, so make sure they can get at the flowers!
*If you鈥檙e growing under cover, open up greenhouse or tunnel vents, windows and doors. And encourage more pollinators into the area by planting nectar-rich flowers among your tomatoes!)
You can also improve fruit set by hand pollinating. Now you could go from flower to flower with a small artist鈥檚 paint brush like this 鈥 and that would work, but a far more practical solution to dislodge the pollen to fertilize the female parts of the flower is to simply twang or tap on plant supports. By vibrating the flowers, you are mimicking the actions of a bumblebee to greatly enhanced pollination success!
Extreme Heat
Many gardeners struggle with extreme summer heat鈥揳nd so can our tomatoes. When it gets too hot pollen becomes sterile, especially if nighttime temperatures fail to drop below about 77 Fahrenheit or 25 Celsius.
All you can really do is hold out for temperatures to fall away again. If your plants are under cover help them keep their cool by leaving windows, doors and vents wide open and perhaps adding blinds, cloth or greenhouse shading paint to filter out some of the sunshine.
Be sure to grow varieties suited to your climate too. If it鈥檚 particularly hot where you garden, seek out a warm-climate tomato variety that can better withstand your sultry summer.
High/Low Humidity
If getting just the right temperature wasn鈥檛 enough to contend with, sometimes it can be a bit too humid鈥 or dry for our tomatoes! Those close, uncomfortable conditions that come with high humidity can make pollen sticky, so that it clumps together and fails to drop onto the female stigma. Very dry conditions have the opposite effect鈥搕he flowers just aren鈥檛 moist enough for the pollen to properly stick, so it simply rolls off.
There isn鈥檛 much you can do about high levels of humidity other than ensure adequate ventilation and plenty of space between plants to help along airflow.
- Pruning off some of the lower leaves can help air to circulate better too.
- If bone dry air is your issue, however, be sure to keep plants properly watered and the humidity around your plants should remain more stable as excess moisture evaporates. Ensuring enough water will also give plants the resources required to fully swell their fruits, while reducing the risk of them simply dropping off.
- If you鈥檙e growing under cover, splashing water onto paving鈥 known as 鈥榙amping down鈥欌搘ill also help increase humidity.
Not Enough Light
If your tomato plants have lots of lush foliage but few flowers then consider light levels. Tomatoes love a sunny spot and will only do their thing if they receive a minimum of six hours direct sunshine a day. Dull weather presents a temporary challenge, but if you鈥檝e planted them in a less-than-sunny position you may be best moving your plants to somewhere sunnier, because more sunlight means more energy to grow those fruits.
Incorrect Nutrition
Finally, check what you鈥檙e feeding your tomatoes. Once the first flowers appear you need to be applying some sort of organic fertilizer that has a good level of both potassium and trace elements like magnesium. This will help to encourage exactly what we鈥檙e after: more flowers and better fruit set.
Use a product such as a liquid tomato feed or seaweed concentrate. This will help to promote healthier plants, reduce the risk of blossom end rot, and will up the final nutritional value of the fruits themselves. Most feeds are applied about once every two weeks by measuring out and diluting the concentrate according to the packet instructions, then watering it on at the base of the plants.
And don鈥檛 forget to aim for exemplary soil health anyhow, by incorporating plenty of well-rotted organic matter into your soil at least once a year. This will build up a thriving community of soil life, which in turn will help to support all your plants, including those lovely tomatoes!
For more information about growing and harvesting tomatoes, see the 蜜桃恋人’s Tomato Plant Guide!
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The skins on my tomatoes were hard to eat this year for some reason. They were plentiful and had good flavor, but the tough, thick skins ruined the experience. Do you know what would cause that?
The reasons for a tough skin are:
1. The variety (such as Roma and plum which are used for preserving0
2. Underwatering. The tomato plant is conserving what little it has.
3. High temperatures to prevent sun scald. Look for a variety that can tolerate heat and drought.
I think I read in Farmer's 蜜桃恋人 this is caused by an insect getting into the tomato plant's roots; ar;
plant looked beautiful one day and over the next two days lost all its leaves leaving only withering looking stems which are holding 4 tomatoes. the other plants look fine. what could be the culprit