Extend the harvest of your tomatoes and enjoy them longer when you take these simple steps in late summer and early fall.
Most tomatoes need 35-50 day to ripen, once fruit has set. As the season moves toward it's close, part of extending your harvest is the aide the plant to begin using all it's energy to the remaining fruit and "create seed"
Your interest in frost and what it can do to your remaining crop should be your focus in the garden, all veteran gardeners have learned by now to keep a watchful eye on the thermostat and to stand ready either to harvest the last tomato or protect them as best one can. Know the date of your first expected frost. If you’re not sure, contact your local extension office. You can also view the freeze/frost information provided by the
A month before your last expected frost prune the tomato plants. Cut off the top of the plant, remove all new blossoms, and snip any new shoots. Don't cut any mature leaves, they are necessary to continue to make food for the plant.
Cover your tomato plants with a sheet or light plastic to protect fruit.
2 things to keep an eye on at the end of your tomato growing season.
Discover how to easily build an attractive and affordable greenhouse that will grow anything in any conditions. Also, building your own greenhouse just makes economical sense. You can build a greenhouse at just a fraction of the cost of buying a pre-built one. Most pre-built greenhouse you buy need to be assembled anyway, you are really just paying hugely inflated prices for the material.
Daughter of Iowa farmers, Missouri homesteader, and mother of five, Diane Ott Whealy never anticipated that one day she would become a leader in a grass-roots movement to preserve our agricultural biodiversity. The love for the land and the respect for heirloom seeds that Diane shared with her husband, Kent Whealy, led to their starting Seed Savers Exchange in 1975. Read More...