Q. What causes cracks in the tomatoes near the top where the stem is? I have also seen some of my tomatoes with very deep cracks. Let me know what you can tell me about this.
A. There are two types of cracking,
longitudinal cracks (which you have) and radial cracking (which you don’t have).
Yours are longitudinal cracks. Radial cracking is mostly a varietal issue. Some
varieties of tomatoes show these radial cracks more than others. If you have
radial cracks, grow a different variety next season. That will lessen, but not
eliminate, radial cracking.
Another possibility is uneven amounts of water to the fruit. These types of skin cracking causes mostly longitudinal cracks. The swelling of the fruit and then shrinking back to its original size can cause cracking because of the expanding fruit. This type of cracking (longitudinal cracks again mostly) is lessened by using a surface mulch on top of the soil. Sometimes watering differently will help.
Longitudinal cracking of the fruit by irregular watering even with a surface mulch of straw applied. |
If you are using surface mulch, I would recommend wood or pine shavings
(like rabbit, horse, or hamster bedding). It “melts” (decomposes) into the soil
easier than straw which has fibers that are tough to decompose. Straw works but
is more difficult to get it to break down quickly.
You
don’t need a thick layer of surface mulch but just enough to shade the ground
and lessen water lost by soil surface evaporation.
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