Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They've been watered plenty. In fact, they were positively drowned during those last major rains of 2-3 weeks ago and they started browning soon thereafter. I've grown tomatoes for many years and these ones look like mine usually do in September: branches dying from the bottom.
I already have two trellises of beans but, yeah, they're doing great. Maybe I can turn my whole yard over to beans.
Yeah it may be blight. This area is so favorable for tomato diseases!I had the same problem a couple years ago- i rotate between two beds but really need more time between each. Took a break altogether from tomatoes last year and so far so good. What about butternut squash? I’ve had good luck with that.
I had what might have been early blight and/or septoria leaf spot last year, but my tomatoes still survived and kept producing new vines and tomatoes. I just kept cutting the sick parts. This year, I am using my other bed (I also only have two), and planted them farther apart (2.5 feet), and I mulched the soil with leafgro. I also cut the lower leaves so that nothing touches or is too near the soil. I have seen a few spots on the leaves of a couple of plants, but overall things are looking much better than last year. It's still early though so we'll see.
+1 don't dig them up yet! Cut off the sick parts (you should prune tomatoes regardless), and I forget how to treat early blight, but even if you don't do much, you're still like to get tomatoes!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They've been watered plenty. In fact, they were positively drowned during those last major rains of 2-3 weeks ago and they started browning soon thereafter. I've grown tomatoes for many years and these ones look like mine usually do in September: branches dying from the bottom.
I already have two trellises of beans but, yeah, they're doing great. Maybe I can turn my whole yard over to beans.
Yeah it may be blight. This area is so favorable for tomato diseases!I had the same problem a couple years ago- i rotate between two beds but really need more time between each. Took a break altogether from tomatoes last year and so far so good. What about butternut squash? I’ve had good luck with that.
I had what might have been early blight and/or septoria leaf spot last year, but my tomatoes still survived and kept producing new vines and tomatoes. I just kept cutting the sick parts. This year, I am using my other bed (I also only have two), and planted them farther apart (2.5 feet), and I mulched the soil with leafgro. I also cut the lower leaves so that nothing touches or is too near the soil. I have seen a few spots on the leaves of a couple of plants, but overall things are looking much better than last year. It's still early though so we'll see.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They've been watered plenty. In fact, they were positively drowned during those last major rains of 2-3 weeks ago and they started browning soon thereafter. I've grown tomatoes for many years and these ones look like mine usually do in September: branches dying from the bottom.
I already have two trellises of beans but, yeah, they're doing great. Maybe I can turn my whole yard over to beans.
Yeah it may be blight. This area is so favorable for tomato diseases!I had the same problem a couple years ago- i rotate between two beds but really need more time between each. Took a break altogether from tomatoes last year and so far so good. What about butternut squash? I’ve had good luck with that.
I had what might have been early blight and/or septoria leaf spot last year, but my tomatoes still survived and kept producing new vines and tomatoes. I just kept cutting the sick parts. This year, I am using my other bed (I also only have two), and planted them farther apart (2.5 feet), and I mulched the soil with leafgro. I also cut the lower leaves so that nothing touches or is too near the soil. I have seen a few spots on the leaves of a couple of plants, but overall things are looking much better than last year. It's still early though so we'll see.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They've been watered plenty. In fact, they were positively drowned during those last major rains of 2-3 weeks ago and they started browning soon thereafter. I've grown tomatoes for many years and these ones look like mine usually do in September: branches dying from the bottom.
I already have two trellises of beans but, yeah, they're doing great. Maybe I can turn my whole yard over to beans.
Yeah it may be blight. This area is so favorable for tomato diseases!I had the same problem a couple years ago- i rotate between two beds but really need more time between each. Took a break altogether from tomatoes last year and so far so good. What about butternut squash? I’ve had good luck with that.
Anonymous wrote:They've been watered plenty. In fact, they were positively drowned during those last major rains of 2-3 weeks ago and they started browning soon thereafter. I've grown tomatoes for many years and these ones look like mine usually do in September: branches dying from the bottom.
I already have two trellises of beans but, yeah, they're doing great. Maybe I can turn my whole yard over to beans.
I had the same problem a couple years ago- i rotate between two beds but really need more time between each. Took a break altogether from tomatoes last year and so far so good. What about butternut squash? I’ve had good luck with that.Anonymous wrote:My plants have not enjoyed the frequent torrential rainstorms we've had. I suspect that is the problem.