Posted on 06/24/2023 5:39:22 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
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10 Common Tomato Plant Problems and How To Fix Them
If you’re growing tomatoes you most likely encountered one or more of these common plant problems. We explain how to identify and fix them.
If you’re one of the three million people who planted a home garden this year, you’re most likely growing tomatoes. Nine out of 10 gardeners grow tomatoes, and that number would be 10 out of 10 if the holdouts would taste a fresh garden tomato and compare it to a grocery store purchase. Nothing beats the taste of a fresh home-grown tomato!
Many gardeners who grow tomatoes, however, encounter growing problems. This list of common tomato plant problems and their solutions will help you identify an issue—whether it’s just starting or already full-blown — and show you how to correct it, so you can save your tomato plants and harvest yummy tomatoes this year.
1. Blossom End Rot
2. Blossom Drop
3. Fruit Cracks
4. Sunscald
5. Poor Fruit Set
6. Catfacing
7. Leaf Roll
8. Puffiness
9. Early Blight
10. Viral Diseases
Descriptions and solutions at link:
https://www.farmersalmanac.com/common-tomato-plant-problems-28544
The spiral is the result of the Golden Mean
Yep. I love fractals, too! :)
Ah, A Fibonacci Tomatoe.
They are know for their Golden Flavor when they are in their Prime.
My problem is sometimes, ‘catfacing’ so I’m looking into what to do about that.
My tomatoes are all blooming and fruiting, so today they are all getting a kick in the pants with a good shot of liquid tomato fertilizer. Nothing fancy - just the one Miracle Grow makes. :)
I’m trying to stay consistent with the watering, as we have had nothing but DRY to start the season. :(
*GROAN* :)
Be good to your tomato seedlings, and they will be good to you. Calcium/Dolomite mixed into the soil at planting. Water at consistent intervals. Leave enough space between tomato vines for air to circulate.
I would add blister beetles and gophers to that list. Personal experience with both last yaer.
That said, I’m going to do something nutty and try — even as late in the growing season as it is — to start a few tomatoes from seed. Fingers are crossed! :-)
Ooooh, NICE gif!
I grew all of mine from seed. But I started mine in March. Some varieties are more likely to germinate and grow quickly than others. Experiment and choose the ones right for you.
We have hot and dry here. I water every other day early.
Greetings from southern New Hampshire!
Barb made us soft tacos last evening, using our first tomato…courtesy of our Planta Sungrow 26 greenhouse.
Yesterday, I moved the north fencing from the garden and wrapped it around the new boundary. We now have 5 new 10’ by 4’ raised beds that are mostly planted with vegetables started in the above-mentioned greenhouse.
Today, I will install the clips holding the fencing to the t-posts, and extend the irrigation line to the new bed.
We had a slight bump in our projects as Suzy, one of our cats, passed over the Rainbow Bridge last Sunday. I made her a box, lined with red flannel and laid out a new flower bed to serve as her grave site. She is now at rest and I have the stones set aside to build the flower bed. We will include pussy willow and other annual and perennials to decorate and memorialize her. She would have been 18 in 2 months.
Well, back to work!
I wa5ched that spinning tomatoe for 5 minutes and now I don’t smoke anymore! Lol 😆 (j/k gave up smoking 10 years ago cold turkey, no hypnosis needed lol)
Zone 7a here... been a dry June so far but yesterday got 6 inches deluge.
Tomatoes look great/very green — not tall/thin/yellowish — believe it is because I added lime to soil.
Experimenting by underplanting zucchini to shield the tomato leaves from soil viruses(?) that cause branches to wither. Will report back.
I have a big crop of tomatillos on two plants. Any advice on trellising or trimming them back?
Hot and dry here, too! Watering every 2nd or 3rd day the last few weeks.
Our first tomatoe is gonna be made into a toasted tomatoe sandwich with salt, pepper and mayo! Drooling for one now lol
Usually this shows up in early August, and trying to sterilize the soil and spray with copper-based spray does not work. Cutting off the bad leaves enables the new growth to be free of such, but the season ends before real recovery can take place.
But most of the garden is still doing well, thank God.
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