Tomato blossom but no fru
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ASHad a terrible year with tomatoes. (Last year was marvelous.) ASThey put out blossoms galore, but never turned into tomatoes. ASFriend suggested I get a spray to "fix" the blossoms. ASI did, but no luck. ASThe one plant, near the compost bin, is still valiantly blossoming ASbut no tomatoes. ASAny suggestions? PBS gardener, Tom Cottle suggested many years ago to add about a tablespoon of upson salts to ones' gallon of liquid fertilizer when tomatoes blossom. Works for me here in New England (about 4th of July 8-). I tried the hormones but it didn't seem to help. Ciao, Ack. --- þ SLMR 2.1a þ You gotta know when to code'em and when to modem. FamilyNet Internet Gated Mail http://www.fmlynet.org |
"THURSTON ACKERMAN" wrote in message ... PBS gardener, Tom Cottle suggested many years ago to add about a tablespoon of upson salts to ones' gallon of liquid fertilizer when tomatoes blossom. Works for me here in New England (about 4th of July 8-). I tried the hormones but it didn't seem to help. Ciao, Ack. you can also sprinkle 2-3 tablespoons of the granular Epsom Salts into each planting hole and mix with the soil when you plant the little buggers. I also plant them up to their leaves burying the stem so they'll form a stronger root system to support the vines. Yes, you're right. They need magnesium and drop their blossoms if they don't have enough. And too much nitrogen will make beautiful leaves but no fruit. Also, temperatures over 84o F will prevent the setting of fruit, unless you have specific heat tolerant varieties... madgardener |
madgardener wrote:
"THURSTON ACKERMAN" wrote in message ... PBS gardener, Tom Cottle suggested many years ago to add about a tablespoon of upson salts to ones' gallon of liquid fertilizer when tomatoes blossom. Works for me here in New England (about 4th of July 8-). I tried the hormones but it didn't seem to help. Ciao, Ack. you can also sprinkle 2-3 tablespoons of the granular Epsom Salts into each planting hole and mix with the soil when you plant the little buggers. I also plant them up to their leaves burying the stem so they'll form a stronger root system to support the vines. Yes, you're right. They need magnesium and drop their blossoms if they don't have enough. And too much nitrogen will make beautiful leaves but no fruit. Also, temperatures over 84o F will prevent the setting of fruit, unless you have specific heat tolerant varieties... madgardener Night-time temperatures below 50F will also cause a failure of tomato flowers to form fruit. This failure can be mitigated with certain plant hormone sprays. The failure caused by daytime temperatures being too high cannot be similarly corrected. The only mitigation for high temperatures might be shade cloth and misting, to keep the temperatures from getting too high. -- David E. Ross http://www.rossde.com/ I use Mozilla as my Web browser because I want a browser that complies with Web standards. See http://www.mozilla.org/. |
"David Ross" wrote in message ... madgardener wrote: "THURSTON ACKERMAN" wrote in message ... Night-time temperatures below 50F will also cause a failure of tomato flowers to form fruit. This failure can be mitigated with certain plant hormone sprays. The failure caused by daytime temperatures being too high cannot be similarly corrected. The only mitigation for high temperatures might be shade cloth and misting, to keep the temperatures from getting too high. David E. Ross Misting increases blight problems IMHO and shade cloth is a bit pricey for many home gardeners. For high temperatures I tried a variety called 'Sun Leaper' last year that produced a huge quantity of large, smooth tomatoes that were wonderful for canning when temperatures were really warm. They didn't have as good as flavor as many others, but they produced after the others quit and certainly tasted better than the pale, plastic blobs one finds in stores. John |
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