Growing Tomato

Lycopersicon esculentum : Solanaceae / the nightshade family

Jan F M A M J J A S O N Dec
                  S S  
T                     T

(Best months for growing Tomato in New Zealand - cool/mountain regions)

  • S = Plant undercover in seed trays
  • T = Plant out (transplant) seedlings
  • Grow in seed trays, and plant out in 4-6 weeks. Sow seed at a depth approximately three times the diameter of the seed. Best planted at soil temperatures between 61°F and 95°F. (Show °C/cm)
  • Space plants: 16 - 24 inches apart
  • Harvest in 8-17 weeks.
  • Compatible with (can grow beside): Asparagus, Chervil,Carrot, Celery, Chives, Parsley, Marigold, Basil
  • Avoid growing close to: Rosemary, Potatoes, Fennel, Cucumber

Your comments and tips

25 Dec 12, rob (New Zealand - sub-tropical climate)
have you had any experience with siberrian tomatoes?
01 Feb 17, Karen (New Zealand - sub-tropical climate)
I live on the North Shore, Auckland and have done container growing for several years now, This is the third year of growing tomatoes on a large scale - predominantly determinate varieties. I source my seeds from Kings Seeds who supply a determinate variety called Sub Arctic Plenty which I have experimented with variable results. All plants raised indoors, gently hardened off then potted out into 15L tubs. I use 50/50 new compost/previously used container soil from a non-tomato pot mixed well with added slow release fertiliser and half a cup of powdered eggshell.. The top is mulched with straw and 4 marigolds to attract the bees. They also need a 5ft stake. Generally the plants like the morning and late sun and need shade from the glaring hot midday temperatures. Each year I am growing them earlier to avoid the heat of summer. The pots on the decking facing North fully exposed struggled, the pots that were shaded midday grew much better. Next year I plan to plant out in July/August and see how they get on then. They have a mild taste, personally I prefer the richer flavours of the dark toms but they are good for dehydrating. I also found that they prefer dryer soil than some of my other varieties. I liquid feed them once a week using a litre of water. Don't let them stand in trays, they need full drainage. Any run off from the trays I use on something else (the pineapple sage is very grateful). Spay every part of the plant with a brew of bicarsoda to pre-empt and control powdery mildew weekly. Please let me know if you want any other info - happy to share. Let me know how you get on.
15 May 17, Derek (New Zealand - sub-tropical climate)
Hi. Thanks for the info which was informative. I tried last year to grow tomatoes and failed miserably. The bottom of the fruit was black and I have been advised this was overwatering and lack of calcium. They were in 15L pots outside and exposed to a fairly windy area. This year I have a geeenhouse and a bit more knowledge thanks to the likes of you:). I am just deciding what to grow in the greenhouse and in my small vege patch but definately have tomatoes on the list a bit later in the year, although I might try growing some now and keep in the greenhouse. Appreciate your comments and advice thanks. I live in Somerville near Howick. Cheers Derek
23 Nov 19, Lee (New Zealand - temperate climate)
Your Blossom end rot could be caused by the small pot. Try a 30L minimum for a tomato of up to 1m, and 50L+ tubs for anything taller. The problem in Northern NZ (Auckland upwards) in the intense heat, humidity, and constant winds on clear days that dry the soil. The soil seesaws from dry to wet, with us trying to compensate the loss three times a day, in small pots. You'll get excellent plants, but blossom end rot, and no useful fruit. I buy seeds from Southern suppliers who have clearly defined seasons in their districts. Here in West Auckland, the sun mid-spring onward is almost too strong for tomatoes (as noted in the comment from The Shore above), and the humidity is oppressive. They are part shade plants here, and 30L is absolute minimum for varieties that suppliers claim can be grown in 18L, or less. This year I'm using no less than 54L each plant, plus grass clipping mulch. So far so good. It's the only way to maintain soil a consistent moisture.
21 Dec 12, Allen Lee (Australia - temperate climate)
Mulching of tomatoes is always a good practice and if you are short on stakes and have palm trees handy cut off one palm leaf strip off leaves use rib as stake replace later if needed. The reason for the chewed tomato underside are snails and during the night have a great feast and by the time you see them they are hidding on a full stomAch of tomatoes. The Slater isn't the problem he's just visitor enjoying the works of the snail and slugs. If the hole is a single small dot could be fruit fly if larger could be white cabbage moth.
21 Dec 12, allen lee (Australia - temperate climate)
The grubs you have in your tomatoes are fruit fly. There are few remedies one is organic it has both male& female attracting lure in jar.the other has a male trap and there is female attraction lure which you paint on. A leading hardware store sell net bags which I find useful tied around forming bunches it allow air in stops birds pecking them(close weave) and prevents some flies getting to tomatoes and can be left to ripen. You can use chemical spray but must take care check label instruction wear protective clothing and check withholding period.
31 Dec 12, Chris (Australia - cool/mountain climate)
I found that mosquito bed nets work well to exclude fruit fly from tomato plants, and fit perfectly over a centre stack. You just need to weight down the edges on the ground so flies can't get under them.
21 Dec 12, allen lee (Australia - arid climate)
Blossom end rot the blacking at the base of tomatoes may be eased by using lime or dolomite water in well there is also product of the same but is liquid form which is mixed with wAter and can be used as a foliage spray if you do it this way add eco fungicide and seasol to protect leaf disease.
07 Dec 12, Irene (Australia - arid climate)
Hi everyone, I have had massive sucess in growing tomatoes in big pots (beauitiful flavour) but in a round garden I have they arent doing so good lots of fruit but by the time they ripen blossom end rot gets them! & I have also round big white grubs in round one of the platnt which I threw out! Any ideas on how 2 prevent blossom end rot?
31 Oct 12, Alice sub/tropical (Australia - sub-tropical climate)
Stressed tomatoe plant not growing strongly and sickly. Any advice?? Apart from annihilate!!
Showing 561 - 570 of 815 comments

Quite a few people had trouble this year with tomatoes. I had, what I thought was a good crop considering my back yard is badly shaded after lunchtime by big neighbours trees so I get maybe 4 -5 hours of direct sun at the equinox late Sept at very best. This is a challenge of itself, so you have to start under fluoros with the plants really close to the light to get enough light intensity. I have a big HPS & Metal Halide too, but they are expensive to run and while with practice one can get good results, I am broadly happy with a 4x4 ft fluoro to get my seedlings started at around 25 degrees (which the lights generate themselves during winter, using a very heath robinson incubator, which is just a polyester cloth cover to keep the heat in. I put in a $5 timer so, it goes off during the expensive power times and comes in at night and morning for 16 hours-ish when power is much cheaper. I managed to get a good crop this year. transplanting out Sep 1..... As Oct comes in the day length increases up to the 22 Dec where day length is at max, about 15 hours in the Sydney region. Tomatoes if well watered and well fertilized tend to grow strongly and if they are getting lots of Nitrogen and other necessary elements, will do this often to the exclusion of flowering for some time. They need (my observation using a light metre) about 10,000 lux of light for at least 4-5 hours or else they really struggle. To get this we are talking full sun for at least half the day and maybe the balance at 5,000 lux mornings and evenings so broken shade. That sounds like a typical sunny spot for some of the day, in the average suburban back yard. = mine. Commercial farmers in the flowering stage, up the Potassium levels, (it also helps with shortened day lengths) but this is to feed the tomatoes forming (more than anything else) and to keep the fertilizer regime balanced for the plants needs, using specialist leaf analysis. That is the first part, you want strong tomato plants and a good size if possible to sustain the fruit which will set, if indeterminate plants form 1-4 trusses high and maybe a lot more if you train the leaders and can string them up a bit higher or arc the stalks once the fruit has been removed and leaves trimmed away. To promote flowering what you need to do is make each plant reabsorb their own naturally occuring hormonal exudate which is given off from their own root system, (ref. ABC of NFT (Dr Allan Cooper) and which he explains deposits into the soil from the roots, under the plant during watering. I will explain the implications shortly. I grow in 10 litre trays heaped up a bit and 9 litre black 80 cent buckets, with holes in the sides, (I like everyone do not have unlimited resources, so I economise) so this helps them to flower fairly early, as I don't allow any or minimal run off, other than during rain storms, so my seeds planted in late June indoors under flouros and planted out 1 Sep, gave me lots of 150-250g tomatoes (Apollo F1) by November, but in the ground, this might be further delayed. (I ran out of tomatoes today for the first time 5th Feb) and there is 7 in our family I have been able to feed, plus the bush turkeys and possums have taken at least 1/3 of what I grew I have just layered and made 12 new tomato plants from the 2 best cherry tomatoes I grew, so expect to back in little tomatoes in a week or two. One commercial grower showed me, that once you are happy with the size of the tomato plant (in soil), stop watering it, and let it start to wilt. Outside summer this can take up to 3 or 4 days, (so I am talking serious plant stress) That will mean that it is readsorbing the hormone back from the soil, That reabsorption instructs the plant (yippee, it is time to make flowers!) Using this method and a very small pot, you can make tomatoes flower prematurely very easily. You will have to spray with organic design Dipel to kill caterpillars as stressed plants tell nature, come eat me please and the butterflies and moths will quickly oblige the call. Dipel will stop the caterpillars stone dead, and is harmless to humans, so there is negligible or no withholding period. Another tip I heard, but yet to prove is small amounts of Epsom Salts hand watered. It is a dodgy technique, but Magnesium is (if partially missing) is suddenly an important element. Dolomitic lime supplies this element, but can make the potting mix too alkali, and tomatoes seem happier acid at pH 5.5 to 6.5, & I have had good results down to 5.0 in peat, perlite and peat vermicullite blends with potting mix.....so I suggest the following to keep your pH right. Use granitic dust from your local soil supplier. 3% by volume is very good mixed into your soil plus compost or media. It will move the pH, but only very slowly over 6 weeks. It helps water holding capacity in the soil or potting mix, so if you have clay laden soil, use gypsum and it combined, as both have some real magic side effects re production and plant health, arguably by stimulating biological components in the roots and supplying other missing bits of the mystery jigsaw beyond the chemisty text books. One to two weeks seems to bring about big changes, once rock dust is applied, but its effect is only as good as the other limiting factors like light and good broad plant nutrition, and good drainage. I use a good complete fertiliser which contains balanced amounts of all fertilizer and trace elements. I mix my own fertilizer, which contains NPK plus calcium, sulpur, magnesium, manganese, iron, copper, molybdomen & zinc. That takes a bit of chemisty a spreadsheet and 5 bags of different bagged fertilizers, which I mix, so I suggest something much easier which works well also very well. Osmocote complete + Nitrophoska (both include all trace elements and both are slow release) added 50/50 @ totalling 30 grams fertilizer per 10 litres of growing media (in pots) I have found works nicely, and should have additional liquid feeds along the way. A standard not nec. premium Aus standard potting mix works well (save you some serious money) and the Osmocote has a very good wetting agent included, which helps keep everything evenly moist during the heat. The Nitrophoska has less Nitrogen so is a bit slower, but helps the flowering, but interestingly gives a nice deep bluish green to leaves, when I compared both fertilizers separately. Urea (Nitrogen source) is good for greening up) once again a suggestion by another market gardener), but you need everything else to be strongly supplied and balanced also, without any excesses. Nutricote is reportedly an excellent fertilizer. The nutrient balance is very good.....I have yet to read of a professional trial where it does not come in #1 or #2. Just make sure you get the right NPK and trace element type for or what would be suitable for vege gardening. If the fertilizer is two high in nitrogen, not so good, choose one where the K&N are close in % age terms. P is generally used in much lower levels than the other two, so don't worry to much here, so long as some is present. I grew cherry tomatoes this year with this mix and had huge amounts of fruit in Terrigal from October, growing in 4 inch deep trays. The key is small amounts of media, with as much of it open to the air as possible for root oxygen exchange (which is very critical to high productivity), but too small a container and your plant is a midget. 13 litres I have read, and pretty much proved myself, is the optimum. If you can grow in soil or a bigger pot, that is great as your tomato might be a bit or a lot bigger, but you will have to starve the plant on occasion to get it to start flowering. Currently running pot media trials, so if anyones interested email me. Interestingly my own home made mix made from a pile of grass clippings and everything that falls from palms and trees or recycled, mulched up and given a spray of water on occasion and some rock dust and fertilizer, then screened with an old tennis racket, is working as well as if not better than anything growing tomato seedlings after 2 weeks in 37 degree heat outside........seriously surprised!!! Forgive my long post, but hope this helps amateur growers just like me. Please note I am an amateur, so will continue to refine my techniques, which in 5 years might be a lot different, but so far, accoring to my limited budget this is what I have found works quite well. Good luck.

- Rod

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