Try to remove suckers while they’re young and you can pinch them cleanly off.
Do you like to train your plants and check up on them almost every day? If so, then you may be a natural tomato pruner. Pruning tomato plants is an optional technique that some gardeners use to keep plants tidy, manipulate fruit size, and even speed ripening. There is one big catch: You should only prune indeterminate varieties, which produce new leaves and flowers continuously through the growing season. If you prune determinate varieties, you may reduce the harvest. (Looking for indeterminate varieties to plant? Try our Tomato Chooser.)
Do you know what the different parts of a tomato plant are called?
Here are some reasons to prune tomatoes:
– Bigger fruit. Pruning at the right time directs energy toward creating and ripening fruit instead of making more leaves. Overall, you will probably have fewer fruit on a pruned plant, but it will be bigger. And, since pruned plants can be put a bit closer together in the ground because the growth is so vertical, you’ll have room for additional plants to make up the difference in harvest numbers.
You can begin pruning plants any time once they’ve reached 12 to 18 inches in height.
How to Prune Tomatoes
(Indeterminate Varieties Only!)
You’ll want to prune tomatoes throughout the season. Here’s what to do and when:At Planting
– Remove the lower leaves when planting so you can bury plants deeply into the soil. If you’re planting a Bonnie plant, follow the directions on the wrapper.
To do the Missouri pruning technique on suckers, pinch off the growing tip, leaving only the two lowest leaves.
Early/Mid-Season
– Remove flowers until plants are 12 to 18 inches tall, so plants can direct more energy to the roots.– Remove all leafy suckers beneath the first fruit cluster so they won’t slow the development of the fruit. Suckers are the little shoots that form in the spot (called an axil) where the leaf stem attaches to the main growing stem. In northern regions, many gardeners go further, removing all suckers as they appear. In warmer zones, though, experts often recommend practicing what’s known as Missouri pruning, where you pinch off the leaflets on the end of each sucker, leaving only the two base leaflets in place. As these leaves enlarge, they help shade fruit and protect it from sunscald. Try to remove suckers when they’re small enough to pinch with your fingers, so you don’t leave a gaping wound on the stem. If you do have to cut them, use a sharp knife or pruner blade to make a clean cut as close to the main stem as possible without damaging stem tissue.
“Top” plants for faster late-season ripening by removing growing tips about a month before the first frost.
Late Season
To
help improve airflow and cut down on the chance of disease, remove the
leaves along the bottom 12 inches of the stems of indeterminate tomato
plants.
What if I already have big plants in the garden?
– For plants supported by cages, you can remove some leaves from the center of the plant to increase airflow, which can help prevent and/or slow disease outbreaks. Research shows that leaves nearest a fruit cluster are the ones that send sugar to that fruit, so when thinning, do not remove leaves directly above and below the cluster. That way, leaves above can help shade the ripening fruit, while leaves below can send sugars to it.
0 comments:
Post a Comment