Monday, May 24, 2010

Pruning Tomato Plants 101

I love pruning….absolutely love it. Of course, this may be for the same reason I love weeding (yeah, I am a little weird). There is something about interacting with the plant and helping it towards some better future or purpose…like producing the biggest and tastiest fruit :) . So how do we make that happen? First, what type of tomato plant are you growing?

Determinate or indeterminate?
Determinate generally grow to one "determined" size and have one large harvest.
Indeterminates get big and crazy and produce fruit over the course of the season.

I only sold one determinate variety this year…Roma. If you are growing a determinate, pruning is of little concern. You might consider removing a few lower branches to assist in air movement under the plant (reduce fungus concerns), but that is it.

Otherwise, read on for indeterminates…

1) Tools - Clean hands and tools. Please wash your hands before pruning. If you smoke, use lots of soap! Smokers can actually pass a virus from the tobacco in their cigarette to their lovely tomato plants. If you do smoke, you should quit….really…quit. If you use a tool (like pruning shears), you should wash these regularly to avoid passing disease between plants.

2) Timing - Ideally you would prune early in the day when the plants are dry and have plenty of day left to recover. That being said, I rarely do…I do have a day job! At the least, be sure the plants are dry. Pruning when wet will greatly increase chances of disease. Try to prune on days when you do not water (you should really do that in the morning too for the same reasons).

3) Training - You want the plant to grow to the correct size given the space you have given it. Tomatoes will grow very large and wild given the chance. So we need to control the larger growth pattern. You should already have something to assist it in growing upwards (cage, stake, twine, etc). Now, we need to control how it grows out of that space to maximize light/air exposure. The smaller the space dedicated to that plant, the smaller the number of main stems…and vice versa. However, I never give a plant more than four main stems…more than that and you will lose control. In my greenhouse, I only give each plant one! This allows each plant to concentrate on growing the largest possible fruit. Two is a good number given a smaller garden with space limitations. More stems may give you more flowers/fruit, but the tomatoes will be smaller. The less clusters, the larger the fruit! To add a new stem, you basically allow a sucker to grow. These should all grow from roughly the same area in a plant, above the first flower cluster if possible. If you are unsure of what a sucker is…keep reading.

4) Pruning

a) The first area I prune is the lower portion of the plant. This promotes air flow under the leaves and on the soil…all very good for the plant and its health. You should remove any branches below the first set of flowers. To remove, just use your thumb and fore finger to snap off the branch at the main stem. If the branch is too large, you can use shears or scissors. Below is a good picture I found …
b) Next up are the suckers. I have yet to decide if these guys are good or evil. “Sucker” is not a very nice term in my opinion. These are basically the plants effort to spread out and take control. Each one is no different than the top of your plant…minus the fact they were not the first in line. Again, you may want to let a few of these grow to allow multiple “main” stems. Given the chance, a sucker will grow to monstrous size in a very short time. You may have a hard time differentiating between the main stem and many suckers. If you find this is the case, you may just need to cut one and allow the other to take over. You may want to allow one sucker to grow in addition to the main leader/tip on each stem at a given time (remove it when the sucker above grows to an inch or two). This is your backup if the main leader/tip becomes damaged. Here is a picture displaying a sucker. They basically grow between a branch and a stem (or in the crotch…sorry if that is mildly crude, but it is accurate). This picture displays both “Simple” and “Missouri“ pruning…stick with Simple. There is a reason they call it Simple :) . Remove suckers once a week...
c) Lastly, you should top the plant about a month before first frost. This will allow the plant to concentrate on ripening the remaining fruit. Feel empowered and just do it. Prune each and every growing leader/tip on the plant...you will be happy you did.

As always, please let me know if there are any questions or experiences that may contribute.

Thanks and happy gardening!

Shawn

22 comments:

  1. Thanks so much for the great information. This is my first year growing tomatoes and I have no idea what I am doing. Do you ever need to pinch off the flowers?

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    1. please dont pinch off flowers...they turn into tomatoes. the only time that might be okay is if you have an extremely large amount of flowers or fruit and are afraid the plant cant handle that much weight

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    2. If you had a bunch of flowers in a cluster pinchoff about 20% of the cluster. It will make the other tomatoes grow better.

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    3. If you had a bunch of flowers in a cluster pinchoff about 20% of the cluster. It will make the other tomatoes grow better.

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  2. Thanks for this! My tomatoes did get very much out of control last year and I think this will help.

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  3. what do you mean by topping the plants?

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    Replies
    1. By topping the plant means to stop any further growth upwards.

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  4. Great info. Thx for explaining :) found this on pinterest.

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  5. Great info. Thx for explaining :) found this on pinterest.

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  6. http://www.dachnikam.net/

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  7. I have a question, how do the plants you can buy at garden centers get such thick stems ? I see them no taller than mine (from seed), but VERY thick stemmed.

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    1. I have produced thick stems from seeds by growing under lights placed about 2 in. above top leaves. Use fluorescent lights so as to not burn plants. Hope this helps

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    2. I have produced thick stems from seeds by growing under lights placed about 2 in. above top leaves. Use fluorescent lights so as to not burn plants. Hope this helps

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    3. Another easy way you can achieve those super thick stalks is to try cloning your suckers. when you cut off your suckers place them in a cup of water (just like cut flowers in a vase). Don't leave them in direct sunlight, bring them in the house or put them in a shady spot in the garden. Within 6-10 days you should see roots. I have done this with flowering suckers and had lots of success.. Its SO easy and you can't argue with free plants :)

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  8. Yes, factual and easy to understand....Thanks!

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  9. Please. Any suggestions on growing indeterminate Roma tomatoes in Phoenix, Arizona, would be greatly appreciated.

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  10. At what point should you start pruning? I'm growing from seed, and no flowers have formed yet. Should I still prune the large leaves that are forming near the base of the stem?

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  11. Helpful in that 20% of the flowers should be pruned. I have black spot whatever for the first time in three years I read someplace about copper stuff or fungicide. Can I make something at home to stop this ugly from killing my plants off? They have beautiful tomatoes right now. Looking this last two months of work would just be sad☹

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  12. Awesome!!! im new to indoor gardening..i hope the next batch gets a little bigger... thank you!

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  13. Awesome!!! im new to indoor gardening..i hope the next batch gets a little bigger... thank you!

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  14. So the pruning (re: suckers) information here should only be done to indeterminate varieties? Just want to confirm before I start snipping!

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  15. If i smoke it's none of your damn business, Don't try to tell people what to do,

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