Variety this year is Sungold, a golden cherry tomato.
At various times I read that you should stop the plants at 5, 6, 8
trusses. A quick search today finds loads of advice about limiting the
number of trusses.
My haphazard gardening means that for the first few weeks I train the
plants and pinch out, then something (such as a holiday) intervenes and
any detailed care goes by the wayside and friends just water them.
I've never really subscribed to the view that you can only grow a limited
number of trusses and at the moment we have around 30 trusses with
maturing fruit across two plants, we have already gathered quite a lot of
fruit, and there are still flowers forming new trusses.
The latest trusses are looking a bit small but that is probably due to
lack of feeding.
I have read that ripening stops below 20C but again in the past I have
grown outdoor tomatoes up until the first frost (which can be in December
in mild years).
A couple of side shoots were allowed to grow a bit then pruned and potted
on, and these are going great guns in a friend's garden. The friend being
a better gardener, these have much larger fruit but when we go round to
water them I'm going to count the trusses. I suspect there are more than 6
per plant.
We are in Suffolk so plenty of sun and a long growing season.
How many trusses do you grow?
[Just remembered a TV programme which showed a nursery on Jersey (I think)
where they kept the plants growing upwards on a line and just let the
stems down in a circle as the growing point got higher, effectively
continuous cropping.]
Cheers
Dave R
--
AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 7 Pro x64
---
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus