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#1
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Tomatoes
It's very strange, I have a beautiful tomatoe plant. It's green and lush.
Grows wonderfully. The only problem is it has only grown one not so good tomatoe. What am I doing wrong???? -- Kathy Olson http://www.desertdogs.biz DesertDog's Pet Companions |
#2
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Tomatoes
Two possibilities come to my mind right off.
1. Too much shade. 2. Too much fertilizer. I would think others will add to that short list. Steve Aria wrote: It's very strange, I have a beautiful tomatoe plant. It's green and lush. Grows wonderfully. The only problem is it has only grown one not so good tomatoe. What am I doing wrong???? |
#3
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Tomatoes
Sounds like a pollination problem.
"Aria" wrote in message news:6R96b.17570$n94.4980@fed1read04... It's very strange, I have a beautiful tomatoe plant. It's green and lush. Grows wonderfully. The only problem is it has only grown one not so good tomatoe. What am I doing wrong???? -- Kathy Olson http://www.desertdogs.biz DesertDog's Pet Companions |
#4
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Tomatoes
Hmmmm, I didn't think of that. I've never had that happen but in looking
again, I see Kathy is in Tucson. That is a very long way from the Adirondacks where I live. Kathy, were you getting lots of flowers that fell off without producing a tomato? Steve FDR wrote: Sounds like a pollination problem. "Aria" wrote in message news:6R96b.17570$n94.4980@fed1read04... It's very strange, I have a beautiful tomatoe plant. It's green and lush. Grows wonderfully. The only problem is it has only grown one not so good tomatoe. What am I doing wrong???? -- Kathy Olson http://www.desertdogs.biz DesertDog's Pet Companions |
#5
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Tomatoes
On Fri, 5 Sep 2003 17:31:11 -0700, Aria wrote:
It's very strange, I have a beautiful tomatoe plant. It's green and lush. Grows wonderfully. The only problem is it has only grown one not so good tomatoe. What am I doing wrong???? using too much fertilizer? nighttime temperature too high for the type of tomatoes you're growing? no bees/insects to set blossoms? |
#6
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Tomatoes
Yes, Steve....Tons of flowers...........high temps most of the time. These
tomatoes said that they do best in humidity. We had very dry temps at first, but then lots and lots of humidity. Very pretty flowers though....We also grew watermelon that never grew fruit. It also had lots of flowers. "Steve" wrote in message t... Hmmmm, I didn't think of that. I've never had that happen but in looking again, I see Kathy is in Tucson. That is a very long way from the Adirondacks where I live. Kathy, were you getting lots of flowers that fell off without producing a tomato? Steve FDR wrote: Sounds like a pollination problem. "Aria" wrote in message news:6R96b.17570$n94.4980@fed1read04... It's very strange, I have a beautiful tomatoe plant. It's green and lush. Grows wonderfully. The only problem is it has only grown one not so good tomatoe. What am I doing wrong???? -- Kathy Olson http://www.desertdogs.biz DesertDog's Pet Companions |
#7
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Tomatoes
Well, that would be the problem I guess. I know tomatoes don't set fruit
when it gets too hot. That's a problem I'll never see unless I move some day. I'm pretty sure some varieties are more heat tolerant than others. If anyone else in the neighborhood is getting good tomatoes, ask them what kind they grow. You may still get some good tomatoes on your plant when the weather starts to cool a bit more. Steve Aria wrote: Yes, Steve....Tons of flowers...........high temps most of the time............... |
#8
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Tomatoes
"Aria" wrote:
Yes, Steve....Tons of flowers...........high temps most of the time. These tomatoes said that they do best in humidity. We had very dry temps at first, but then lots and lots of humidity. Very pretty flowers though....We also grew watermelon that never grew fruit. It also had lots of flowers. I recall reading a book that recommended in areas with extreme high temp and harsh sun to lay a piece of trellis on top of your tomato cage to give them a break from the peak overhead sun. I was surprised since tomatoes are full sun--but maybe you are in a climate where it is too intense. Do you have lots of pollinators visiting the plants? Although, I've read constantly that a simple shake of the plant is enough to encourage selfpollination. I shake the tomato cage lightly once a a week and I've harvested 7 dozen so far from 3 plants (one has been suffering from wilt since June). Fertilizing wrong (too much nitrogen not enough phosphorus/potassium) can screw up the fertility of the plant. I messed up all my corn with the wrong mix of fertilizer. DiGiTAL ViNYL (no email) Zone 6b/7, Westchester Co, NY, 1 mile off L.I.Sound 1st Year Gardener |
#9
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Tomatoes
OK, I have the same problem. Lots of blossoms but they just dry up and
fall off. I tried some spray on stuff that is supposed to cure that problem with no success. My near by mint bush and rose bush have lots of bees, so I don't think pollination is the problem. In past years three tomato bushes produced more tomatoes than we could eat. Sacks full given away, etc. This year one bush has produced a few tomatoes and one bush has produced exactly ONE tomato. (I only planted two bushes this year because of the huge production in past years.) My area is a desert so I have complete control over water and I haven't changed my watering schedule. I have never had this problem before, same garden location, same amount of sun, same temperatures, same fertilizer, etc. I wonder if the variety could be the problem. Better Boy, both plants. I meant to get two different varieties as is my usual practice but somehow ended up with two Better Boy, which I haven't tried before. Any help would be appreciated. This year is a loss, but I hope for better success next year. Regards, hawk On Fri, 5 Sep 2003 21:17:18 -0700, Aria wrote: Yes, Steve....Tons of flowers...........high temps most of the time. These tomatoes said that they do best in humidity. We had very dry temps at first, but then lots and lots of humidity. Very pretty flowers though....We also grew watermelon that never grew fruit. It also had lots of flowers. "Steve" wrote in message t... Hmmmm, I didn't think of that. I've never had that happen but in looking again, I see Kathy is in Tucson. That is a very long way from the Adirondacks where I live. Kathy, were you getting lots of flowers that fell off without producing a tomato? Steve FDR wrote: Sounds like a pollination problem. "Aria" wrote in message news:6R96b.17570$n94.4980@fed1read04... It's very strange, I have a beautiful tomatoe plant. It's green and lush. Grows wonderfully. The only problem is it has only grown one not so good tomatoe. What am I doing wrong???? -- Kathy Olson http://www.desertdogs.biz DesertDog's Pet Companions -- Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/ |
#10
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Tomatoes
On Mon, 08 Sep 2003 11:34:42 -0700, hawk
wrote: OK, I have the same problem. Lots of blossoms but they just dry up and fall off. I tried some spray on stuff that is supposed to cure that problem with no success. My near by mint bush and rose bush have lots of bees, so I don't think pollination is the problem. In past years three tomato bushes produced more tomatoes than we could eat. Sacks full given away, etc. This year one bush has produced a few tomatoes and one bush has produced exactly ONE tomato. (I only planted two bushes this year because of the huge production in past years.) My area is a desert so I have complete control over water and I haven't changed my watering schedule. I have never had this problem before, same garden location, same amount of sun, same temperatures, same fertilizer, etc. Tomatoes are (wholly or largely) self-fertile - that is, each flower fertilizes itself. So the problem is not likely to be lack of bees or other pollinators - I don't think pollination is the problem either. Weather conditions would certainly be a possibility - too hot, too cold. Both are possibilities, I believe. I wonder if the variety could be the problem. Better Boy, both plants. I meant to get two different varieties as is my usual practice but somehow ended up with two Better Boy, which I haven't tried before. I'm growing Better Boy this year too and I'm not really terribly impressed with it, but we've had a LOT more tomatoes per plant than you have. I haven't counted, but we've been giving them away in basketfuls (plus eating a lot of them, and drying a lot of them too). The reason I'm not impressed with it is the lack of flavor: although this might be unfair to Better Boy. We've had an exceedingly wet year and this is supposed to 'water down' the flavors. Nevertheless, I'm not going to grow it again. Pat -- "Rats and roaches live by competition under the laws of supply and demand. It is the privilege of human beings to live under the laws of justice and mercy." - Wendell Berry |
#11
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Tomatoes
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