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When trusses start forming its a good idea to remove the lower leaves to let in light and air.If they are cordon tomatoes don't forget to remove the side shoots and when you have 4 trusses pinch out the growing tip to encourage ripening.
The greatness comes not when things go always good for you,but the greatness comes when you are really tested,when you take,some knocks,some disappointments;because only if youv'e been in the deepest valley can you ever know how magnificent it is to be on the highest mountain.
How many can you get rid of? I didn't know this either and it will allow a lot more space in my concervatory!!! Do i get rid of the leaves up where the first truss is?
Usually. I often forget - it's me age, poor old dear! I've heard of people stripping the whole thing when it's set enough trusses. (Between 4 and 6 it's said) However, I reckon the leaves are there for a purpose. I do find that stripping the ones below the first truss does help with weeding the soil underneath (I grow them in the greenhouse border.)
Commercial growers take off the bottom leaves to expose the developing trusses. But then they allow the plant to grow very long so there is always a fair amount of leaf. As shown here:
For us, I think removing the bottom leaves up to the first truss would work and maybe a few more as the plant reaches the top of the greenhouse.
FWIW I don't take any leaves off my Toms - unless they are unhealthy. I reckon they are all producing "power" for the plant.
(My Toms are 2' apart in the greenhouse, so have plenty of air / space).
I think the stopping-them thing should be date dependent, not number of trusses, but I don't know what date would be right to get everything ripe by the end of the season. I'm going to make an experiment this season though.
i am taking out leaves here and there where they are shading trusses or being a pain.
I will have to stop my plants soon as they are reaching the top of the sloping green house roof!
I also didn't pay attention to sideshoots near the top of the plant and before I knew it each of my 3 cordons now have a 2 prong top!
The first truss on one of my cordons is being a bit hit and miss with fruit setting - I currently have 2 developing and about 4 that don't look like they will. I try and mist the flowers every day to help them set but is there anything else I can do or is this just a usual first truss thing?
My toms are Shirley by the way and I have 6 Romas (2 in greenhouse 4 outside as i couldn't bear to get rid of the plants once I'd grown them...so out came the bedding by the back door!) which are semi-determinate (apparently)
Brilliant advice - I've been quite nervous about removing the leaves but I can hardly move and my beef tomato is rather bushy even though it is supposed to be a cordon. Hmmmm...
i dont know what cordon means, but i have just given my toms in the greenhouse a hair cut, as they were so bushy and it has made them far easier to water,
one thing i will note for next year is NOT to use grow bags, when they are flat, as the toms are getting heavy it is a nightmare trying to keep them upright, so for next year i am gonna do as others have suggested and use grow bags cut in cut and stood up, more room for roots and also keep the stem sturdier!
"is there anything else I can do or is this just a usual first truss thing?"
I tap the canes (like drumming-your-fingers on the table, only vertically!!) which dislodges the pollen. It generated that tomato-plant-smell which I presume is actually just pollen. I don't bother with the spraying thingie ... but my greenhouse is large, and therefore naturally pretty humid whereas I expect a smaller greenhouse would be more naturally drier.
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