Q. I
raised tomatoes for about 7 years and this year was my best year. The tomatoes
that work best for me are Early Girl, Champion and Celebrity. This year I got
about 200 tomatoes from these three plants already, they are still coming, and
they taste good too. The only thing I did differently this year is put a 1-inch
layer of worm castings on top of the soil. Was it the weather or the worm
castings that did it or both?
Worm castings is now a popular addition to raised beds for vegetable production.. Photograph complements of Viragrow, Inc. Las Vegas, Nevada. |
A. This may sound like heresy but there is nothing
special about the fruit when using worm castings versus any good compost or quality amendment added
to the soil. Some may argue but the tomato plant doesn’t know the difference. The
important thing is that soil improvement was done.
But the overriding factor
this year was probably the cool spring weather. Granted, you are managing your
tomatoes better each year, the spring weather was cool for a long period of
time, and you applied a good soil amendment and fertilizer in the form of worm
castings.
Repeat
what you did next year and see if there is a difference in your production and
the taste of your tomatoes. Hopefully, you took some good notes. I am guessing
you will see a smaller number of fruit produced if the weather heats up in a
hurry and there isn’t a long, cool spring like we had this year. And if you use
a good soil amendment, like worm castings or a quality compost, the tomatoes
should taste superb again.
Tomatoes
stop setting fruit when air temperatures stay consistently above 95F. The
tomatoes that set earlier continue to grow and mature when it stays hot. That
isn’t the problem, It’s the production of fruit that stops at high air
temperatures. That’s when the entire plant stops making more fruit.
If the
air temperature drops below 95F for a couple of days, new flowers will again
set fruit. They stop setting again once the air temperature returns above 95F. With
air temperatures that fluctuate to the low nineties and then rise to the high
nineties, tomato fruit production may be erratic.
Fertilize tomatoes with a start up fertilizer at the beginning and don't fertilize again until you start to see small fruits develop from the flowers. |
Some other varieties of tomatoes to try
include cherry tomatoes like Sweet 100, Sun Gold and grape tomatoes as well as
the yellow pear tomatoes. These plants are reliable, quickly produce fruit from
flowers and can fill some gaps when temperatures fluctuate a lot.
Also,
choose tomatoes that are determinate in form rather than indeterminate. These
tomatoes tend to produce larger numbers of fruit early in the season and don’t
sprawl all over the garden.
Include varieties
like Better Boy or Big Boy and a Roma type like San Marzano for a “meatier” tomato.
Move tomato plants to the other end of a raised bed rather than plant them in
the same spot year after year. This helps reduce disease problems.
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Thanks Bob, we aren't getting any crop this year. Planted late and now it is too hot.
ReplyDeleteYup. That will happen in our climate.
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