Member discussion regarding the methods, varieties and merits of growing tomatoes.
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September 3, 2009 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: CNY zone 5
Posts: 179
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Is there anything I could do better or different for 2010? Also spacing ?
Hi,
I don't post here often, more of a lurker. I was wondering if anybody could chime in on how many you think I could fit into my tomato garden space and if I'm really giving them enough sun? This was my fourth year for growing my own tomatoes. This year I had a 9.5'x13'. My wonderful hubby double dug this bed and I put a good amount of super old horse manure in. I may expand 2 more feet next year (9.5'x15')and that's it. I have alot of trees in my yard and have very limited spots (this being the only 1) that get the same amount of sun from spring to fall. So as you can tell, I have to keep my tomato garden in the same spot every year. My other side does get about 10-11hrs direct sun until mid summer than is shaded alot, maybe 3-4hrs direct for the rest of the season. Stupid maple trees I do plan on dumping either well aged manure or having compost delivered every fall to help bump this patch back up. I also fertilize with Neptune's Harvest and my plants LOVE it. I have a white tail deer problem, so I can't place tomato plants here and there, they must be fenced. 1 end of this bed is also very close to 1 of my larger evergreen's, so I would imagine there may be very, very close root's competing for nutrients also. Now after mentioning those few hurdles,I also have limited hrs of sun. The very middle of the bed , 9'x9', get's a constant 8-9hrs direct sun for the whole growing season (9:30am-18:00pm). Both end's, 9'x3'(10:30-16:30pm), get about 6 hrs of direct sun for the whole season. I know it's not alot, not including the fact that I also have a short growing season, but it really is the only area I have to grow these. See pic of my 2009 tom patch. For spacing I did a 2' path and each tomato plant got a 3'x3.5' space. I realize after seeing the plants grow up I really could have spaced them closer and maybe even skipped the path and done 1 more row of tom's. I'm the only 1 that goes in there to prune and pick and I had TONS, TONS of room with the spacing I did, way too much room. I kinda felt it was a waste of room. Maybe because I have limited sun and my growing season is shorter my plants don't turn into monster's like they do in the south? I did stake half of them (ran out of stakes and had to use cheap cages, LOL, I chuckle each time I see the cages). I will stake them from now on. I pruned to about 4 stems each plant and they were very easy to control and tie to the stakes. So after explaining my tomato garden, How many plant's could I bump up to in 2010 with the 9'x15' bed? If I started early inside and black plastic the bed for spring to warm it up, I was thinking about making homemade water well's using soda bottles or gallon jugs to plant early, maybe early-mid May, I wanted try some late season types. Or should I even bother, because of the short light time and growing season that I have. Should I stick with early-mid season types? I have also read that large/beefsteak types need large amounts of sun to produce the large fruits, which I just don't have (all my large types this year got my prime spots in the higher amount of sun). Should I even bother with large fruited types? This year for big 1's, I did Big Beef hybrid (have a total of 16 fruits), Chianti Rose (total of 3 HUGE and 3 medium fruits), Momotaro hybrid (13 fruits), BFT (about 20 large-medium fruits), Hazelfield Farm, not large, but was at end of bed and only got about 6-7hrs was loaded with small/medium-medium fruits. Now after having not much luck the past 3 years, to see that many tomatoes on each plant (except the Chianti Rose) I was so happy, until I started reading on good season's other people can get up to 40 fruits on a plant??? Am I right in thinking it's because of how short my season is and the amount of sun or a combo of that and I do prune? For my cherries, I was happy with the Sungold and Black, except the Black in production wasn't much, but I will still try it again next year. Grew Matt's Wild and it was productive (had the worst spot in my bed), but was not happy about taste at all. I do realize I shouldn't complain too much as I did not have any problems with disease at all. So many people lost thier crop to disease and I had no problem in that area. All my plants were happy and strong this year.
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Melissa1977 Zone 5 CNY |
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