Six-foot tall tomato plant ...
On 13 Jul 2003 23:07:57 GMT, Bert Hyman wrote:
Is this a good thing, or a bad thing? We've never grown anything edible before beyond a few herbs, sticking solely to decorative plantings, but this year completely on a whim I picked up two tomato plants at the garden center. Beyond watering them, the only thing we did to it was pinch off the first batch of flowers that showed up, because my wife recalled reading somewhere that you should do that. Now, both plants are nearly 6 feet tall, with stems the diameter of my thumb or larger, and both are starting to produce tomatoes. Other tomato plants that I can see in the neighborhood are nowhere near so robust; should we have done something to the plant to slow its growth, or should we be happy with the results so far? I have 12 plants 6 ft. or taller. You don't have to pinch off anything. Just water and pick tomatoes. |
Six-foot tall tomato plant ...
In commercial glasshouses where tomato plants are grown for around 10 months
they get to 30 or more feet long. the plants are grown on strings, and as the fruit is removed from the lower part the plants are lowered and the bare stalk is laid along the ground and the new section of the plant is trained up the string. -- David Hill Abacus nurseries www.abacus-nurseries.co.uk |
Six-foot tall tomato plant ...
Other tomato plants you see around the neighborhood may be shorter because they
are a determinate type or a "patio" tomato, whereas your plants may be indeterminate and are a rapidly growing vining type. BT "Bert Hyman" wrote in message ... Is this a good thing, or a bad thing? We've never grown anything edible before beyond a few herbs, sticking solely to decorative plantings, but this year completely on a whim I picked up two tomato plants at the garden center. Beyond watering them, the only thing we did to it was pinch off the first batch of flowers that showed up, because my wife recalled reading somewhere that you should do that. Now, both plants are nearly 6 feet tall, with stems the diameter of my thumb or larger, and both are starting to produce tomatoes. Other tomato plants that I can see in the neighborhood are nowhere near so robust; should we have done something to the plant to slow its growth, or should we be happy with the results so far? -- Bert Hyman St. Paul, MN |
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