Anonymous wrote:OP here again. How are everyone else's tomato plants doing? About how many green ones do you have growing on each plant? (Have you had any red ones come in?) If yours are doing particularly well, please post advice that I can follow next year. Thanks!
(I'm asking specifically about big tomatoes -- not cherry tomatoes.)
I planted roma, big boys, pink ladies, black krauss, indigo rose, and cherries this year.
The Indigo rose seem to be doing the best, they are a little more than double the size of cherries. I have maybe 10-15 per plant on those. The pink ladies are coming in second at 2-3 large green ones per plant. That's about average for the really big tomatoes I've found. Nothing at all ripe yet, we've usually been eating tomatoes for 2+ weeks already.
This is my 6th year planting tomatoes in this climate. It looks like it is going to be my worst yield yet. I grow from seed and I had terrible trouble getting the seeds to sprout this year and even if they did sprout many withered before I could transplant.
Last year I had about 70 plants, this year only 50. I usually have enough tomatoes to can sauce for the whole winter and for us to eat all summer long. With the way the plants are looking this year I will be lucky for us to have enough to eat fresh this year.
I'm also disappointed in my zucchinis and pumpkins. The pumpkin plants are small. Not vineing and leafing like they need to be at this point. The zucchini plants are large, but even with me helping the pollination process along I have yet to get a fruit to form.
So far my best crops this year seem to be my basil and my snap peas. The pole bean plants are growing nicely, but not a bean in sight yet.