🍅 My UPDATED Tomato Trellis for 2023!

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024

Комментарии • 253

  • @dakotamoon8131
    @dakotamoon8131 Год назад +573

    My grandfather had a massive garden and I remember one year he grew a tomato plant that was 18ft tall. That same plant produced multiple tomatoes that weighed anywhere from 3-5lbs a piece and and had 1 8lb tomato and a 10lb one. The man then turned them all into an excessive amount of sauce

    • @ottlakafka3409
      @ottlakafka3409 Год назад +71

      "excessive amounts of sauce" lmao

    • @dakotamoon8131
      @dakotamoon8131 Год назад +74

      @@ottlakafka3409 he would can his own stuff and make sauces all the time. He basically supplied his whole neighborhood with fresh fruits and vegetables. But yeah I remember when he was done that year he had nearly 8 5gallon buckets of sauce that then got sold locally to stores and restaurants.

    • @dakotamoon8131
      @dakotamoon8131 Год назад +36

      @Disabled-Megatron they’re probably somewhere in his workshop. He would always keep bags labeled from every year. He grew several other fruits and vegetables and his favorite was his zucchini plants. He actually grew one so large he got a award thing for it and was on the front of the local newspaper.

    • @gmxhorst
      @gmxhorst Год назад +5

      how did they get so big?

    • @dakotamoon8131
      @dakotamoon8131 Год назад +13

      @@gmxhorst no idea, the man’s is magic

  • @ivorykeys1566
    @ivorykeys1566 Год назад +14

    Yes those suckers will grow more tomatoes however if you prune all the suckers off, you will less but have BIGGER tomatoes. Hack I learned from a widow woman. 😊

    • @alliseburris566
      @alliseburris566 Год назад +2

      Yes, but in Texas that just means you have more split tomatoes due to the heat. I found a lot more success with smaller tomatoes and often grow only cherry and grape varieties.

  • @56_mini55
    @56_mini55 Год назад +92

    I've been taking suckers off and planting em... gives a good fall crop. Had small ones till December

    • @SiWardsRedneckAdventures
      @SiWardsRedneckAdventures Год назад

      Yeah, I’ll stick pruning suckers

    • @jonslg240
      @jonslg240 Год назад +1

      Notice he doesn't say the weight difference either ..but for cherry tomatoes it wouldn't matter
      For big tomatoes it would, depending on the size you want..
      That being said, if you trim "all" of the "suckers" you're the sucker because you won't get any tomatoes.
      You can clone suckers, and if you do it early enough you can end up with multiple plants that give you ripe tomatoes in stages

    • @At0micAllison
      @At0micAllison 4 месяца назад

      Where are you growing that you can have a “fall crop” of tomatoes? I only ever get green ones in weather that cool

    • @lisaconnor9655
      @lisaconnor9655 3 месяца назад

      Yes I did the same. Took off suckers and stuck them in water to grow a couple roots. Then planted them. I had tomatoes well into November

    • @lisaconnor9655
      @lisaconnor9655 3 месяца назад

      Don't prune any of the suckers on any type of cherry tomatoes

  • @gardeninginthedesert
    @gardeninginthedesert Год назад +73

    I'm a novice tomato grower, my biggest plant is nearly a foot tall. I was told to remove all the suckers which I've been doing as soon as their sneaky little heads pop through. Thanks for letting me know about this. 🍅🍅🍅

    • @ShamanBuddha
      @ShamanBuddha Год назад +12

      Just make sure they have enough feed and water. Probably better to let the tomato get to around 2/3 ft and in its final spot before you properly let them go.

    • @gardeninginthedesert
      @gardeninginthedesert Год назад +3

      @@ShamanBuddha Got it, thanks 👍🏼

    • @richm5889
      @richm5889 Год назад +34

      To be clear, pruning the suckers on indeterminate (vining) LARGE variety tomatoes is appropriate because it takes a long time and a lot of the plant's resources to grow a large tomato. Cherry tomatoes in his example are different. They grow a lot of tomatoes all over the plant. Some suckers will grow and produce tomatoes and others will use up two or three feet of growing energy and produce nothing. You don't trim off all the suckers on a cherry plant if you want to get cherry tomatoes. That said, his trellising solution is really good.

    • @richm5889
      @richm5889 Год назад +7

      You also don't trim all the suckers on determinate tomato plant. Those are bush tomatoes not vining. Google the variety to find out what you have

    • @melaniedennis9540
      @melaniedennis9540 Год назад +9

      You can even plant the sucker's separately in a pot and you'll grow tomatoes as well

  • @cookingsherry8784
    @cookingsherry8784 Год назад +55

    Were they both the same type of tomato? Looks like the ones you pruned were bigger tomatoes, sort of like beefsteak, and the ones you didn't prune were cherry tomatoes. Cherry tomatoes, even though they're indeterminate, should not be pruned. There is a big difference! Also, I would be interested in knowing the weight of the tomatoes harvested rather than the number because a 110 beefsteak tomatoes are going to weigh more than 330 cherry tomatoes.

    • @phillipowen7490
      @phillipowen7490 Год назад +12

      You’re exactly right. You get bigger, better tasting tomatoes when pruning

    • @allisonkarasch12
      @allisonkarasch12 Год назад +1

      I didn't know you don't prune cherry toms! Can I prune a few just not all? I'm worried my setup won't support it all. Also, I was planning to leave a sucker or two for each of my beefsteak plants. Do you think I'll still get good flavor and texture? This is my first year gardening so I'm learning a lot!

    • @cookingsherry8784
      @cookingsherry8784 Год назад +8

      @@allisonkarasch12 You can prune some on the bottom of a cherry tomato to plant it deep for roots and a little bit throughout to make sure it gets enough air, but cherries will produce even on the suckers. For the beefsteak, I would not leave any suckers because they just slow down production of the arms that will produce tomatoes, and pruning the armpit area of suckers provides more air throughout. If the suckers are big enough, you can put them in some water with honey, sugar, or rooting solution to develop roots and then pot them up until you're ready to plant your next round of tomatoes. I know it sounds weird because if they are suckers on one plant, they will not produce tomatoes, but when pruned and potted they can become the primary stem of a tomato plant. It's like getting free plants!

    • @allisonkarasch12
      @allisonkarasch12 Год назад +1

      @@cookingsherry8784 thank you so much for the info 🙏🏼 I wish you a great growing season!

    • @cookingsherry8784
      @cookingsherry8784 Год назад

      @@allisonkarasch12 You're welcome, and best wishes for great success to you as well!

  • @seriouslyreally5413
    @seriouslyreally5413 Год назад +9

    😂 I got lazy( and busy) one year and didn't prune the suckers and had the Mother of all bumper crops of tomatoes. So I stopped creating myself extra work😂 and leave them alone. Texas Tomato Cage them and thin out foliage for good airflow. Done

    • @louisacapell
      @louisacapell Год назад +5

      Who would have thought! If you leave the part of the plant that grows the tomatoes on you'll get more tomatoes!
      This fad of cutting everything off of the tomatoes except the top couple of leaves is really crazy.

  • @benegutierrez2167
    @benegutierrez2167 Год назад +2

    cut a cattle panel to the size of the trellis and let the tomatoes grow up that you can use the string to tie vines that stick out and it fare less work then stringing the vine to individual strings and picking the suckers that grow besides the 4 strings

  • @spaci1010
    @spaci1010 Год назад +76

    I feel removing suckers from tomatoes is the biggest scam told to mankind 😢😢😢

  • @Godisincontrol325
    @Godisincontrol325 2 месяца назад +1

    Such a Genius idea 🎉 Simple easy and clean 😁 Thanks for sharing 🙏

  • @richlaue
    @richlaue Год назад +6

    You can let the sucker get some leangth, place in water till roots grow, then cut and plant.
    It is also possible to bury a section of the vine, then when roots grow, cut to make a new planet

  • @insidethegardenwall22
    @insidethegardenwall22 Год назад +8

    What I do is to simply plant my tomatoes in the sunny side of my elderberries. The elderberries provide the strong support and fruit on their own with no issues. The tomatoes happily obliged. Nothing to build. At the end of the season, I cut the elderberries all the way down to the soil level as I am supposed to and the next season, repeat all over again. These are American elderberries. European elderberries have a different pruning requirement.

  • @alexasphotosgeneral3584
    @alexasphotosgeneral3584 Год назад +3

    Absolutely appreciate your experiments! I’m an amateur garden, I question almost everything I do but I often look back at your videos to see I’m on the right track

  • @unmeaninglessly143
    @unmeaninglessly143 Год назад +44

    Pruning is for the bigger tomatoes

    • @thereinthetrees_5626
      @thereinthetrees_5626 Год назад +3

      No, that’s just not true

    • @cookingsherry8784
      @cookingsherry8784 Год назад +7

      For the bigger indeterminates, true! Cherry tomatoes, although indeterminate, should only be pruned for air if they get too bushy.

    • @justemusicme
      @justemusicme Год назад +9

      I love gardening videos because you get to see everyone disagree with each other in the comments as they provide anecdotal evidence of their grandpas grow techniques and how what they know is correct, and what you know is wrong. 😂😂😂 it never fails! Look up any “gardening” video and peep the comments 😂 people are ego maniacs

    • @satelconsa6873
      @satelconsa6873 Год назад +1

      ​@@justemusicmeit's always their grandpa's 😅. Wala kayo sa lolo ko.

    • @louisacapell
      @louisacapell Год назад +1

      ​@@justemusicme the problem is there are crazy fans going around now that basically destroy your ability to grow food. You really need to apply some logic.
      It's simple.
      If you cut the part of the plant off that grows the fruit then you don't grow much fruit.

  • @bravowhiskey4684
    @bravowhiskey4684 Год назад +44

    I always cut suckers because they can kill the main stem. However, I let them get 4” or so first, then cut them cleanly and root them to propagate additional plants.

    • @Omni11B
      @Omni11B Год назад +9

      Never seen a sucker kill a well fed plant

    • @lainafields
      @lainafields Год назад +2

      @@Omni11B Me either. I leave lots of suckers on mine.

    • @jessicaheger1880
      @jessicaheger1880 Год назад

      I do the same. More plants, more 'maters 🍅

    • @lainafields
      @lainafields Год назад

      @@jessicaheger1880 😁You must be from the South.

    • @louisacapell
      @louisacapell Год назад +2

      This is patently false

  • @millionairementality_
    @millionairementality_ Год назад +4

    Good information.
    Thank You!

  • @rUK-wl6sg
    @rUK-wl6sg Год назад +1

    What a great and wonderful explanation and useful post thank you so much 🌷🌹🤲🏽

  • @TheAfricanOrchid
    @TheAfricanOrchid Год назад +2

    I’m glad you did this experiment because I don’t prune (suckers) and my tomatoes do very well. People cutting everything end up with skeletons for tomato vines. I’m like who keeps this information going because it’s wrong. I get loads of fruit from a healthy plant

    • @cookingsherry8784
      @cookingsherry8784 Год назад

      Do you grow determinate or indeterminate tomatoes? That makes all the difference. The only indeterminate tomato that does not need too much pruning is the cherry tomato.

    • @louisacapell
      @louisacapell Год назад

      ​@@cookingsherry8784 no this is a crazy fad.
      Think about it.
      You're cutting off the part of the plant that grows the fruit.
      How will that help you grow more?
      My father my grandparents I myself have grown all sorts of tomatoes for decades.
      If you cut the part of the plant off that grows the fruit you will not get fruit. It's simple. This is a bizarre fad.

  • @sobejames
    @sobejames Год назад +11

    Neat! I miss being able to garden.

    • @Omni11B
      @Omni11B Год назад +2

      What is stopping you? I'd love to help get you back to it

    • @wendymacneill6689
      @wendymacneill6689 Год назад +2

      @@Omni11B me too, that is, chat about how you might get back to it if you like…there are so many ways!

  • @crispy9175
    @crispy9175 Год назад +1

    I grew two Everglades tomatoes once. One i pruned. It was hard work, i got some tomatoes. One i let go crazy. It was no work and had really 10x the tomatoes.

    • @MindandSoil
      @MindandSoil  Год назад +1

      Woot! Thank you for sharing :)

  • @patriciablue2739
    @patriciablue2739 Год назад +3

    What do you secure the strings to at the base?

  • @Irrigation_Tech_Talk
    @Irrigation_Tech_Talk Год назад

    Screen of green get some grid or old fence tilt the trellis 15 to 30 degrees. Flatten out the growing plant prune any shaded under growth leaves

  • @TheKerribeland
    @TheKerribeland Год назад

    Yeeees! Thank you! I have 2 suckers I left, and now that they're almost my height, they need help! Super easy, and solves the problem I ran into, JUST IN TIME! THANKS!!! 🎉

  • @c.a.greene8395
    @c.a.greene8395 Год назад

    I used the back stairs of my house to train up my tomatoes.
    They grew some 30 feet - from the first floor to the 3rd floor.
    Although they didn't receive any direct sunlight I still had several dozen large juicy tomatoes.
    The planter they grew in was also where my husband has been emptying my daily coffee grounds, egg shells, banana and fire place ashes....
    I put the plants under the stairs and out of the sunlight because my family prefers green tomatoes over red ones, yet we still had plenty of red tomatoes thanks to the fireplace ashes...
    ( my sons love fried green tomatoes and green tomato chutney 😊

  • @lukeludwig1055
    @lukeludwig1055 Год назад

    It would also be interesting to see total weight produced for both plants

    • @MindandSoil
      @MindandSoil  Год назад

      Yes! I totally agree ! Thanks for watching :)

  • @hannanrafique1360
    @hannanrafique1360 Год назад

    I planted cherry tomatoes and did exactly the same I plucked bottom suckers but left the top suckers. And let Me tell you I reviewed insane amount of fruits. Alhamdulilah.

  • @sarahdeason493
    @sarahdeason493 Год назад

    Love your experiments .. Your vidros are gold ❤

    • @MindandSoil
      @MindandSoil  Год назад

      Glad you like them! Thanks for watching :)

  • @AllThingsWoWarcraft
    @AllThingsWoWarcraft Год назад +1

    that comment on suckers just blew my mind. im in the process of experimenting runnin 3 stems on most of mine this yr. i thought they would grow slow but they are 8 ft tall, some are as samll at 6 ft

  • @VincentVonDudler
    @VincentVonDudler 3 месяца назад

    Would like to see the way the strings are connected to the plant.

  • @BarryWillBuck
    @BarryWillBuck Год назад +1

    Did you weight the total output also?
    I usually let smaller plants sucker some, but larger tomatoes I want to concentrate the energy

    • @stephaniedurham2889
      @stephaniedurham2889 Год назад

      I was also curious about the total mass of the harvest with sucker plants compared to the mass if the plants with suckered removed.

  • @tcideh4929
    @tcideh4929 Год назад +1

    Yes but what was the weight of the tomatoes.
    Just like with fruit trees you can thin or not.

  • @dirtyprancing5930
    @dirtyprancing5930 Год назад +5

    Are we finally circling back to the superiority of the tomato cage, then?

    • @alliseburris566
      @alliseburris566 Год назад +2

      Nope-- a cage will crowd the tomato plant too much when it's growing that many main stems. Uber-productive tomato plants will start having problems with too much moisture on the leaves and make them susceptible to insects.

  • @ThatBritishHomestead
    @ThatBritishHomestead Год назад

    I just live this thanks so much

  • @yusufdavids766
    @yusufdavids766 Год назад +2

    Brilliant idea. I like it.🇿🇦

  • @metalsurgeon9196
    @metalsurgeon9196 Год назад

    Ten squares of concrete re-wire make a nice round cage about six feet tall. Just train them inside and around it. No construction projects necessary.

  • @beastamer1990s
    @beastamer1990s Год назад

    PSA: TOMATOES WILL NEVER NEED A STAKE OR TRELLACE IF YOU INTERWEVE THEM! you will lose a little efficiency as they won't be as spaced out and harvesting is a little harder but its worth it imo. I never stake my tomatoes, i just grow them close to each other and "tie" their branches together (i twist them together and let the leaf nodes hold them in place)

  • @trainmanhawaii
    @trainmanhawaii Год назад

    And this is exactly why I don't grow indeterminate tomatoes but to all that do enjoy. Dwarf determinant tomato plants equals non staking and pruning..❤️👍

  • @Murlockingqc
    @Murlockingqc 3 месяца назад

    You should give a try to letting the tomato plant grow on the ground like a squash.
    I tried it one year and the only plant I didn't stake produced more tomatoes and was healthier.

    • @SmokedPaprikas
      @SmokedPaprikas Месяц назад

      Depends on where you live, here in florida unless your growing Everglade tamatos those leaves and tamatos will be diseased and eaten by bugs

  • @DanielleBeaty
    @DanielleBeaty 3 месяца назад

    Love this!

  • @MD-ki7qw
    @MD-ki7qw Год назад

    You should try Florida weaving them in between to help with support but if you don’t need it it’s all good. thank you for all the information!

  • @Sapujapu88
    @Sapujapu88 Год назад +14

    Black Diamond huh? My man is not only a gardener, he also a Mountain goat.

  • @waffle_chair9269
    @waffle_chair9269 Год назад

    Needed the end result to make it go from a good video to a great video.

  • @clarencedaniels_
    @clarencedaniels_ Год назад

    You can take every one of those suckers and put a little rootinghormone on them and put them in a semi shaded area and have new tomato plants that will grow and produce Tomatoes after the main plant are already dying out.

  • @Randibunny
    @Randibunny Год назад

    If we could make a tree that grows tomatoes 🍅 that would be the best thing ever

  • @derHexenhammer
    @derHexenhammer Год назад

    the suckers can be planted in direct sunlight and you got a whole new plant

  • @kltpurp2206
    @kltpurp2206 Год назад

    I worked at a greenhouse, and my boss and his father (the previous owner) had a competition every year where they would see who could grow a better tomato plant. My boss would buy the newest seeds of a Tomato called Tomato X, which produced super juicy purple tomatoes and he used this technique :)

  • @pdmullgirl
    @pdmullgirl Год назад

    Pretty smart!
    ❤️💜💚

  • @christinadeckard2722
    @christinadeckard2722 Год назад

    Do another experiment. Prune the suckers and plant them in their own space on a trellis I'm guessing over 100 tomatoes per plant. May be ten or more suckers...

  • @stachowiak70
    @stachowiak70 6 месяцев назад

    Suckers can go into bottle of water and root after a couple weeks, becoming an easy clone.

  • @JaeElle
    @JaeElle Год назад +1

    Brilliant! Simple fix, I like

  • @bethanysmith5856
    @bethanysmith5856 Год назад

    I need to get my brother to help me make a tomato trellis like that. Planted a bunch of tomato plants without a trellis, forgot how much they grow since we've had a few bad years in a row, and ended up with a jungle.

  • @adamschaafsma5839
    @adamschaafsma5839 Год назад

    A good idea I'll try it out

  • @allenuic
    @allenuic 3 месяца назад

    You don't need to aggressively take off suckers on cherry tomatoes. In fact, cherry tomatoes grow best in large cages rather than trellis.

  • @RJrePRO
    @RJrePRO Год назад

    I used a trellis for the first time this year without doing any research (it was a gift) and I don't think I'll ever go back!

  • @w2male320
    @w2male320 Год назад +6

    leave the suckers you get more smaller fruit on average I am not sure if they are simmilar weight lb for lb tho on total yield. 10 tiny tomatoes can equal 1 big tomato so more isn't always better.

    • @jamesdagmond
      @jamesdagmond Год назад

      In cherry tomatoes it doesn't matter. Pruning is for indeterminant slicers.

  • @alvashoemaker8536
    @alvashoemaker8536 Год назад

    Thanks for sharing this…! 😃😃👍🏼‼️

  • @snowpaw360
    @snowpaw360 Год назад

    I had tomato plants that were taller than the house and did U bend back down. First time i ever made my own tomato sauce, loved it.

  • @irisholiday34
    @irisholiday34 Год назад

    Was there any difference between quality, taste and size in your tomato experiment?

  • @GrayBear420
    @GrayBear420 Год назад

    Might I recommend you add two braces to each side to keep that top sill from tilting forward or backward due to the added weight you are giving the set up.

  • @dougdoingdemos
    @dougdoingdemos Год назад

    Lots of info to a short vid. Thanks

  • @jellocubez7
    @jellocubez7 Год назад

    Can you let it naturally adjust upwards by using a pulley and counterweight?

  • @Domo6768
    @Domo6768 Год назад +1

    How exactly do you deal with birds eating your tomatoes?

    • @xtiebro
      @xtiebro Год назад +1

      I have heard of 2 ideas:
      1) provide a bird bath or other source of water, sometimes they're just eating the tomatoes cus they're thirsty
      2) paint red rocks and have them scattered about BEFORE your tomatoes are fruiting. The birds supposedly are tricked into thinking that the tomatoes are just more rocks. I've heard of people using Christmas ornaments too, and hanging them on the vines.
      I can't attest to how well they work. But I've never had an issue with birds in my tomato garden, and always provide a water bath. And we have tons of birds around, but also provide feed for them (and lots of pesky grackles, so not just songbirds). So not sure if there is a correlation there or not. Squirrels though... that's another topic!!

  • @blipblip88
    @blipblip88 Год назад

    Every year I buy a bunch of seeds or re seed ones from last year..i never know what the hell they are..and I'm lucky to get a handfull of tomatoes from each plant, cuz i'm one lazy gardener

  • @ayatti26
    @ayatti26 Год назад +1

    So it is the same as removing the sucker and making a new plant. The new plant made the same number of tomatoes as the tomato plant that was not allowed to keep its suckers. So either way you get the same number of tomatoes. In the end it all depends on your preference and the look of the plant. Some would prefer a pretty plant over a productive plant. Give me productivity by any means necessary.

  • @santiagocruz9426
    @santiagocruz9426 Год назад

    I'm interested in seeing this play out

  • @XroorX
    @XroorX Год назад

    You grow indeterminate until they’re 3ft high, then lay that horizontally and cover that stem every 12” with soil. Trellis won’t need to be as high

  • @FC2ESWS
    @FC2ESWS Год назад

    How many suckers should you leave? Is 3 the magic number?

  • @michaelbonesmusic
    @michaelbonesmusic Год назад

    is the same true for determinate tomatoes? I have always pruned the suckers...might have to try this myself next year as an experiment

  • @the1plantguy
    @the1plantguy Год назад

    Pretty cool

  • @Robinroochie1
    @Robinroochie1 Год назад +1

    If you want bigger tomatoes prune flower buds back to 3 or 4

  • @maboo736
    @maboo736 Год назад

    But what about the quality of the tomatoes from suckers? Has anyone tested (and tasted) them to compare? I’d love to grow more but only if they come out good…

  • @louisacapell
    @louisacapell Год назад +2

    Yeah who would have thought that if you leave the part of the plant on that grows the tomatoes that you'll get more tomatoes!?!
    Crazy!
    There is an absolutely absurd trend going around telling you to basically cut everything off except the top leaves. They've got huge giant tomato plants that are just basically one long stick with three tomatoes on top. Telling everybody this is the way you're supposed to do it.
    Don't be fooled guys they just don't want you to grow food.

    • @lenabanx6221
      @lenabanx6221 8 месяцев назад

      I’ve done it both ways and personally prefer to prune them. When the suckers aren’t pruned I have lots of tomatoes, but the quality isn’t there. And idk if he was comparing different variety’s with the numbers he gave out but the number of tomatoes I do get is not even that much lower, (and I’ve actually gotten much more as long as they have the height to grow) but boy do they taste better, grow bigger, look healthier. The second reason, my tomato plants are sooooo much healthier when I prune them. They have air circulation, disease doesn’t become rampant by the end of the season, they put out fruits longer, pest have never taken over. The difference I’ve personally seen in that aspect means I will ALWAYS prune my plants.
      Besides, this isn’t a new trend. When I talked about pruning them up a single branch (because I had never heard of it or seen them do it) to my parents, whom have had a garden since the 80s, and both had grandparents that had huge gardens… they said “yeah that’s how we’ve always known to grow them.. we’re just a bit lazy and give them a cage and let them do whatever.”

  • @Ashthedragon69
    @Ashthedragon69 Год назад +1

    Can’t wait to see it

  • @dakotagarcia3772
    @dakotagarcia3772 Год назад +1

    I like this idea. May try something similar soon!

  • @sarahdenkins3431
    @sarahdenkins3431 Год назад

    This will be great for pole beans as well!

  • @TheOnlyKontrol
    @TheOnlyKontrol Год назад

    They have actually done a experiment on this apparently and have figured out that anymore the 2 main stems starts actually decreasing the yield or just not having a improvement on yield at all. So most people do 2 main stems fro large yields. 3 would be cool to try but 4 might be overkill.

  • @gregmelts
    @gregmelts Год назад

    Interesting experiment. Always taught to trim suckers. Did you see a difference in the quality in the sucker free tomatoes? Larger, redder?

  • @MarcellaSmithVegan
    @MarcellaSmithVegan Год назад

    Good idea Mind and Soul

  • @StarcatMkV
    @StarcatMkV Год назад +22

    I pruned the things that grow tomatoes, and whaddya friggin' know, I got less tomatoes!!

    • @deathbloom27
      @deathbloom27 Год назад +12

      A LOT of people told me when i first started growing tomatoes that pruning the suckers would make the plant push out more fruit as it has more energy. It's a common misconception.

    • @ridhabenammar715
      @ridhabenammar715 Год назад +9

      ​@@deathbloom27 on average they will be bigger but it will depend on the variety. That's why comparing numbers is misleading. The more apt comparison would be pounds of tomato per plant

    • @xtiebro
      @xtiebro Год назад +3

      @@deathbloom27 I think the biggest misconception is that pruning is for more fruit. I just prune heavy for airflow and reduced disease issues. Which yes, does increase fruit production if you’re comparing to a dead plant. 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @Jdizzle-lv6of
      @Jdizzle-lv6of Год назад +1

      Most commercial cultivars cut suckers. The tomatoes produced will be bigger. But also since they cram many plants in space it helps air circulation and limits disease

  • @sandhyarrakesh7923
    @sandhyarrakesh7923 Год назад

    Amaaaaaaazing.. Loved the way you explained soo nicely that made sense. Perfect

  • @BrisLS1
    @BrisLS1 Год назад

    I have trellis to trellis, so I can make that same thing, like 5 overhead lines. I just can't get the pruning right, so trying this same idea. First video that seems to back my current situation.

  • @arshadhussain5145
    @arshadhussain5145 Год назад

    Following for the update

  • @jameswilhite9258
    @jameswilhite9258 Год назад +2

    Even though cherry tomatoes at indeterminate you shouldn’t prune them just as he was saying. Other indeterminate are better to prune

  • @MseeBMe
    @MseeBMe Год назад +2

    That’s a good idea.

    • @MindandSoil
      @MindandSoil  Год назад +2

      Glad you enjoyed it, thanks for watching!

  • @kingbwb
    @kingbwb Год назад

    That’s an amazing idea

  • @JoeandAngie
    @JoeandAngie Год назад +1

    Nice structure!

  • @animezzgamezz1322
    @animezzgamezz1322 Год назад

    I went away for a week and my tomato plants have gone insane. I don't even know where to start trimming them anymore

  • @maggiemaeclune4046
    @maggiemaeclune4046 Год назад

    I love this soooo much!

  • @NCTaeyongIsNOTurbiasHesmine
    @NCTaeyongIsNOTurbiasHesmine Год назад

    I was wandering this comparison, thanks for sharing it.

  • @lisaschreiber2893
    @lisaschreiber2893 Год назад +1

    NICE!!!

  • @asobimo5532
    @asobimo5532 Год назад

    We just cut 4 branches that are thin (not too thin tho) and stick them in a square formation (and plant the tomato where the branch is). And you just tie the 4 branches together at the top (like a tent we all made as kids).
    It doesn't cost much if you have a forest somewhere near you can where you can find young acacia wood (they are thin and can be cut with a hand saw). We mostly use them because they grow like weed here

  • @esmysyield2023
    @esmysyield2023 Год назад

    NICE! I am glad you did the weight thing. It proved what i have been saying for years.

  • @terrykunst3883
    @terrykunst3883 Год назад

    Awesome, keep us posted❤

  • @texastony74
    @texastony74 Год назад

    I was JUST thinking about doing this to mine about 30 minutes ago!

  • @hacgarimman9660
    @hacgarimman9660 Год назад

    Genius mate. Defo trying this year. Thank bud!

  • @PAPERWEIGHTPRODUCTIONS
    @PAPERWEIGHTPRODUCTIONS Год назад

    Brilliant

    • @MindandSoil
      @MindandSoil  Год назад

      Glad you enjoy it :) Thanks for watching!

  • @saillak
    @saillak Год назад +1

    Homegrown tomatoes R so delicious juicey and concentrated flavor, they actually taste like tomatoes! My easiest 2 grow item. My yard hummingbirds love tomatoes - flowers apparently R appealingly 4 them 2 pollinate.

  • @rickbolten7993
    @rickbolten7993 Год назад

    what do you anchor the center line to at the ground?

  • @oluwanifemikim1996
    @oluwanifemikim1996 9 месяцев назад +1

    I don't know why people keep removing suckers

  • @loriegroth2472
    @loriegroth2472 Год назад

    Very cool. What do you use for string?

  • @ayatti26
    @ayatti26 Год назад +1

    During the winter, you have a swing for small children.