Allotment Gardening Advice Help Chat

Growing => Grow Your Own => Topic started by: oldcow on May 27, 2010, 14:51

Title: Stopping tomatoes
Post by: oldcow on May 27, 2010, 14:51
I was checking my tomatoes today, and one of the plants already has 5 (tiny) trusses. They have just been planted outside. Does it mean I should stop the plant, as most of the advice suggests? It seems early in the season, I wonder if there is some "stop X weeks before first frost" rule instead.
Title: Re: Stopping tomatoes
Post by: DD. on May 27, 2010, 15:15
That seems very early, especially for an outdoor plant.

How tall is it?
Title: Re: Stopping tomatoes
Post by: oldcow on May 27, 2010, 15:33
They're about 27". They were grown indoors, spent the last couple of weeks being hardened off, and were planted out a couple of days ago.
Title: Re: Stopping tomatoes
Post by: gillie on May 27, 2010, 16:58
I would stop them when they have got as tall as I want them regardless of the number of trusses.

Gillie
Title: Re: Stopping tomatoes
Post by: oldcow on May 28, 2010, 09:15
How long does it take, on average, for a tomato to go from flower to maturity? I have a mix of cherry tomatoes, medium and large ones. If I know that, I'll know for sure when it's time to stop since the new flowers wouldn't have a chance to mature.
Title: Re: Stopping tomatoes
Post by: rikknikk on May 28, 2010, 09:17
Can I ask what you mean by stopping tomatoes pls
Title: Re: Stopping tomatoes
Post by: Will1983 on May 28, 2010, 09:52
27" ?!?!?!? blooming hell! my biggest is only about 5" tall!

i think ive got a bit of catching up to do!
Title: Re: Stopping tomatoes
Post by: mumofstig on May 28, 2010, 09:55
Can I ask what you mean by stopping tomatoes pls

It's when you pinch off the top of a tomato plant to stop it growing anymore flowers.
You do this towards the end of the growing season so that the plant ripens the fruit it has already set, rather than carry on making new ones ;)
Title: Re: Stopping tomatoes
Post by: Ivor Backache on May 28, 2010, 17:17
I don't think stopping tomatoes is a frost issue more of insufficient sunlight to ripen them. At the end of October the clocks go back and the sun is low in the sky. I just gather all the toms and sort out those which will ripen on the window sill, the rest go in the green chutney recipe.

Early tomatoes need an early sowing. I sow a small number in mid January. I now have four in the conservatory stopped at 3,4 and 5 trusses. I have another 3 in an unheated greenhouse and they have been stopped at 5 trusses, but they are behind the conservatory plants and are still flowering.  All the plants are 5' tall and this weekend I shall pick my first tomato.

My outdoor toms have just been put out and are about a foot tall. I will stop them at 4  trusses otherwise any further trusses will not develop sufficiently.