I am starting to understand why I have more blossom drop than when I planted random plants around the townhouse grounds where I previously lived in the Sierra Madre area of No San Gabriel Valley. One of the causes is lower than 50F nighttime temps. The plants I had at the townhouse grounds had tree protection.
Once the fruit starts to get going, and it warms up, the plants start doing better. Also, some varieties are hardier than others. Cherry varieties seem to have less of this problem However, long spells of high heat can affect the blossoms.
Here is a summary of causes -
- Temp stress - higher than 85F daytime, higher than approx 70F at night and lower than 50F at night.
- Humidity - too low or too high. This is not typically a concern in our area.
- Too many blossoms - some loss is expected.
- Pollination - well, you know, not enough bees.
- Watering - deep water 1 - 2 times a week, do not water shallow.
- Over feeding - feeding lightly at planting and again when fruit starts to ripen is enough. Applying too much nitrogen in our efforts to make robust plants, can cause our own problems.
- Pests - control white flies, aphids, etc.
- Pruning - cut back some of the side shoots to force more energy into the blossom clusters.
My tomatoes are being a bit obnoxious this season. Not experiencing any great bounty and certainly not as much success I had last year. But I am sticking to it!! LOVE tomatoes from a garden
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ReplyDeleteAre there certain varieties that anyone has success with?
ReplyDeleteCan you explain what "deep watering."
ReplyDeleteMake sure the water goes down deep like a foot rather than a few inches. This encourages roots growing down and deeper for a stronger structure absorbing. Plants do not dry out so fast, and the earth with be alive, not dried out and dead.
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