Garden and Yard: 5 Tips for Growing the Best Tomatoes
Disclosure: Some of the links in this post are affiliate links. This means if you click on the link and purchase a product, I will receive an affiliate commission at no extra cost to you.

5 Tips for Growing the Best Tomatoes


tomato plant

Tomatoes are not hard to grow, though there are some things you need to do and watch out for. Usually, the hardest thing for me about growing tomatoes is choosing which varieties I want each year since there are so many. I usually stick to the ones I know I will use throughout the summer and also cook and freeze for use in the winter. Here are some tips for growing tomatoes.

Planting Tomatoes


If you start tomatoes by seed or go to the garden shop and get small plants, make sure you plant them deep enough. Plant them deeper then they are in the pot up to the first couple of top leaves. These first bottom couple of leaves will then turn into roots.

If the plants you buy are large, make sure you loosen up the root ball so the roots can grow easily into the dirt. Again make the hole deep enough so the first couple of leaves are below the surface.

Before planting, put some good compost into the hole before planting. You can also add some type of fertilizer like Miracle-Gro tomato food in the hole as well. Follow the instructions since you don’t want to burn the roots.

Give the tomato plants good spacing, they like and require airflow in between them as that helps to pollinate the plants.

Pollination is very important; this is why adequate spacing is needed between plants. Sometimes you will have plants with lots of flowers but no tomatoes. A tomato plant flower is both male and female so they don’t need bees for pollination.

There does need to be some air movement to make the plants pollinate. If the weather has been hot or humid and still, this can make the pollen sticky and not want to go where it is supposed to go. You can lightly tap the plants to get the pollen to move and pollinate.


Support the Tomato Plants


Before the plants get too big, put cages around them. You can use the normal wire type cages or make your own cages using bamboo poles and some of what is called green garden tape or multi-purpose plant tape. You can wrap that around the poles and the tape will stretch, as the plants get bigger.

Make sure your cages are deep enough and sturdy, as the plants get big they can become top heavy and a strong wind can knock over the cages and plants. This can especially happen during a heavy thunderstorm when the ground gets saturated. Some years my tomato plants and cages just become too heavy and would start to lean so I tied a rope from the cages to a nearby fence to hold everything up.

Controlling Bugs on Tomatoes


One common pest you will have to watch for is the whiteflies. They are tiny whiteflies that can really ruin a tomato plant. 
 
If you get them you can spray the plant with soapy water and if that doesn’t work you can buy special whitefly traps that are strips of sticky paper that the flies stick to and hopefully that will control that problem. You can also make your own with double sided tape on cardboard.

Care and Watering of Tomato Plants


The time of day you water your garden is important. It is best to water in the morning before it gets too hot. Watering at night leaves the plants wet all night and can cause some types of fungus or disease on the tomato plants. 
 
Do not go a week without watering and then try and make up watering by practically flooding the garden. Tomatoes and most garden plants like even watering throughout the summer.

Throughout the summer you should occasionally put some good compost around the base of the plants, this will continue to nourish them. You can also use the tomato fertilizer if needed. I have found that too much fertilizer makes a lot of leaves and not much fruit.

When the plants get about 2’ to 3’ tall you might notice the bottom leaves turning brown and or yellow. This is from fungus and other pathogens from the soil that get splashed onto the bottom leaves. When the plant is about 3’ you can remove the leaves of the bottom 1’ of the stem if needed.

All Those Tomatoes


You can get many varieties of tomatoes. Plum for soups, Roma for pasta sauce, the beefsteak types for everything and my favorite really are the cherry tomatoes. You can eat those as you weed the garden right off the vine. You can use tomatoes for homemade tomato soup and you can cook and freeze tomatoes for use during the winter.

Copyright © 2009-2019 Sam Montana

More gardening articles:

No comments:

Post a Comment