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#40329 August 5th, 2005 at 04:09 AM
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OK...it's August 4th and I maybe have two or three tomatoes that are beginning to ripen. Last year at this time I was already enjoying delicious 'mater sandwiches. What's the deal? I planted my Celerities and Better Boy (plants - not seeds) at the end of May. I have a lot of mature-looking fruit...it just won't turn red. Does anyone have any ideas as to why? I live in Pittsburgh, PA.

Thanks in advance for any ideas/suggestions.

#40330 August 5th, 2005 at 08:01 PM
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Hey Hollers, not sure of the particular problem, but tomatoes ripen with temperature.If it aint warm, they won't do the deed. However, don't be tempted to pick them and or put them in full sun. it isn't the sun that ripens, it's the ambient temperature. Are you having a coolish summer? I dunno. But patience has more than once proven itself to be the answer. if all else fails, i can get a recipe for green tomato chutney. Yummo.

#40331 August 5th, 2005 at 08:20 PM
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I believe that Longy is right, but the effect of the direct sunlight can have an effect on the ripening of tomatoes. I have some on the less sun side that always ripen last. This allows me to enjoy them over the entire season, rather than many of them ripening all at once! Check the amount of direct sunlight, shade, etc. You'll be eating tomatoes when people are having to buy them in the store!

#40332 August 5th, 2005 at 09:05 PM
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Hey GC. You're right of course. Tomatoes on the sunny side will ripen when those on the shady side will not. My point is that it's not the light of the sun that does it, but the temperature. Too much sun can cause sunburn which ruins the fruit. Too little temperature will prevent the fruit from ripening. So be patient Hollers. And if, as i said, all else fails, green tomato chutney is awesome...

#40333 August 5th, 2005 at 09:14 PM
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Thanks for your responses. Thing is, we've been having a brutally hot summer here in Pittsburgh. We just had four straight days of above 90 degree temperatures. It's been in the upper 80s and low 90s all summer. In fact, this has been one of the hottest summers on record. This is the third year I've planted tomatoes (in pots) and I've had them in the same spot on my deck all three years. Like I said, I was already eating tomatoes last year at this time. So...with all the hot weather..and my plants getting the same amount of sunlight they've gotten the previous years (although little rain - but I keep them watered)..I can't figure why I don't have a ripe 'mater yet!!

Thanks for your input. I guess I'll just have to be patient!

#40334 August 5th, 2005 at 09:43 PM
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They just aint ready mate. And no amount of anything green will force 'em.
BTW, greetings from the warmest winter i've had in Oz for ever too.
Weathers' a mess, little wonder the plants are stuffed up.
I don't think we had a frost this year. We normally get a light 3 or 4 with maybe a heavy one or two. This year, nothing under zero! Must've been something we burnt;-)

#40335 August 5th, 2005 at 10:10 PM
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I just got my first ripe tomato this week and they are now starting to ripen pretty regularly one or two every other day. I have eight plants they are roma tomatoes. I live in virginia below you and have had a bunch of hot weather. I planted my tomatoes as seeds in April of this year.

#40336 August 5th, 2005 at 11:22 PM
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Ciao hollers,

Sounds like you might also be in USDA zone 5 like I am. I remember visiting PA one summer and it got brutally humid like it is here in Toronto. Humidity, with all of its moisture, makes it tough for the tomato plants to pollinate and set fruit. Earlier in the season when it wasn't as humid, your plants probably set some fruit and then stalled, as some of mine have. Don't despair, they WILL ripen, but it's been a brutal summer for all of us Great Lakers. My best advice to you is to water once a week during drought conditions for about 2 hours with a soaker hose and mulch your plants with some straw to conserve moisture. That will hopefully stave off foliage disease and prolong the season. Environment Canada has predicted a warm Fall for us which most likely will trickle down to you as well. If that's the case, we should at least get an extended harvest.

Buona fortuna,
Julianna

#40337 August 5th, 2005 at 11:36 PM
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I read somewhere that, in temperatures over 90, tomato plants lots of times will kind of "take a break"-stop producing flowers and maybe even dropping some already-formed tomatoes. Not sure if the same applies to ripening, but, if all other conditions are the same as in the past, except for the heat, then I'd wager to say that that's the prob-good luck!

#40338 August 6th, 2005 at 03:32 AM
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Thanks, everyone, for the comments and advice. I guess I'll just have to wait a little while longer!! And hopefully, like Julianna says, I'll get an extended season with a warm fall!


Thanks again!
Holly
P.S. Like Toronto, it has been extremely humid here this summer, too.

#40339 August 6th, 2005 at 07:07 AM
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Mine are a bit late too and I think I get frost before you do. At least I have peppers this year.

#40340 August 6th, 2005 at 08:31 AM
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I just got my first two cherry tomatoes!!!! clp clp

My big one's are a long way off from getting
big, let alone red!!!

#40341 August 6th, 2005 at 08:05 PM
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Hay Weezie, congrats on the cherry tomatoes. Did they make it in the house before they got eaten? lol. My first tomato barely made it lol.

#40342 August 9th, 2005 at 09:04 PM
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Hello!

Just wanted to let everyone know you were right. Patience was the key. I now have several tomatoes in varying stages of red!! Yippee!! We ate a couple this weekend, and of course, they were yummy!! Better late than never!! shocked )

Holly

#40343 August 9th, 2005 at 10:14 PM
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Tammy,
Quote
Hay Weezie, congrats on the cherry tomatoes. Did they make it in the house before they got eaten? lol. My first tomato barely made it lol.
I can't remember ever a cherry tomato being brought into the house, other than to put in my husbands lunch salad...
They NEVER EVER make it into the house... shocked wink laugh
Those are my snacks to keep me going outside... cool lala

#40344 August 9th, 2005 at 10:15 PM
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Hollers,
Congrat's on those maters!!!
Isn't that one of THE BEST FEELINGS IN THE WORLD?

Fresh homegrown, freshly picked and made in the kitchen........YUMMMMMMY, you just can't beat it...

Unless of course you have a other home grown veggies WITH IT!!! wink

#40345 August 10th, 2005 at 11:44 PM
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Hi, Weezie!

Thanks. Yes...there is absolutey nothing better!! When I bit into the first one, I felt as if I were in heaven, and it made all the work and worrying over my plants worth it! Now my summer is complete!! shocked

Take care,
Holly

#40346 August 11th, 2005 at 12:16 AM
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Awesome hollers!

My couple tomatoes are still very green. :rolleyes: I don't even know how they'll be.. they were the "tiny tim" tomatoes that came with my wonder egg seeds! laugh

I do have some roma plants, and I think one of the 3 plants I put out, has 1-2 teeny tiny tomatoes on it. Steve was certain I'd not see ANY tomatoes, for as late a start as I got on them.. they aren't even all that tall. I'd say my tallest is *maybe* 3 feet tall.

Meg

#40347 August 13th, 2005 at 01:56 AM
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In Canada where I am, the weather has been pretty erratic. We started off cool with a late spring, had some beautifully hot temps in July, but the evenings in the last 2 days feel like fall weather. Normally by this time, I have tomato's the size of baseball, this year they are green and the size of cherries or plums. The only one that I had success with is called Early Cascade Hybrid. I've picked 3 ripe tomato's. As for the rest of them, I don't think there is enough time in the season before the frost hits for them to increase in size, let alone ripen. Oh well, I guess no canning this year.

#40348 August 19th, 2005 at 06:47 AM
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I'm having the same problem as many others have mentioned: I have tons of green tomatoes even though it's been warm for a long time and it's already August 18th!

Because my garden isn't in my backyard (but rather a plot in a community garden), I've had a hard time keeping a close eye on it. That, combined with a busy schedule, has let my 4 tomato plants get out of control! They're huge and bushy and brimming with green tomatoes. They've been that way for at least a month now, with the exception of a few ripe cherry tomatoes. I try to remove the suckers and pinch off the terminal ends, but there are too many branches to get ahold on. One of 'em is so heavy it broke its cage and fell over on top of my strawberries! My problem is that I am leaving the country to study abroad in a month!

My question is this: Can I cut off a bunch of branches, even those with fruit on them, w/o seriously harming the plant? Would this help the plants fruit ripen a bit faster? This is my first time gardening and I'll be so sad if I never got to taste the fruits of my labor!

#40349 August 19th, 2005 at 04:40 PM
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LOL. Patience Bunny. I'm sure you'll get a feed by the end of the month. You sound like Hollers did at the start of the month:-)

#40350 August 19th, 2005 at 08:23 PM
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Ciao Bunny,

You can prune tomato plants if you choose, but all you'll be doing is maybe concentrating the plant into producing larger tomatoes. This is what fair contestants do to get those monster tomatoes. However, if your plant isn't a monster-sized tomato variety, you'll just end up with less fruit. I'd leave the plant to its own devices as God intended and just practice patience.

Buona fortuna,
Julianna

PS FYI for all of you waiting somewhat impatiently for your tomatoes to ripen: I've got over 50 different varieties in the garden and over 150 plants if I bothered to count them all (and that doesn't include the volunteers). Some of them I've already pulled up as their season is over and replaced them with clones and some of them I've yet to harvest. Some of the latter aren't even showing any signs of blush yet. So it really depends on your transplant timing, the variety(ies) you're growing, and environmental conditions. Patience, grasshoppers ;o)

#40351 August 19th, 2005 at 08:37 PM
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Hey Sorellina. How much cross pollination do you get between your different varieties? Or do you take steps to prevent that?

#40352 August 19th, 2005 at 09:29 PM
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Longy,

I use organza bags (the kind used for wedding favours) to cover blossom clusters because I grow plants 2' apart. I remove the bags once the fruit has set and tie a bright-coloured ribbon around the stem to let me know which fruit I need to use for seed-saving. When those fruit are ripe, I squish them into small yogurt cups labelled with the variety name, including seeds and some pulp. That's left out of direct sunlight for at least 5 days until a mat of fungus appears on the top (you may want to do this outside if your nose is delicate). I then pour that off and rinse the seeds several times, being careful not to wash them down the drain, letting the pulp and lighter seeds wash out. What's left in the bottom are clean seeds without the gel. Those get poured onto a labelled paper plate and left to dry, again out of direct sunlight. This drying step can be done inside the house if you have the room. That's all there is to that.

Hope that helps,
Cheers,
Julianna

#40353 August 20th, 2005 at 10:28 PM
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Hi All,

I'm here in Maine, and have just started having my tomatoes ripen. I have Big Boy, Yellow, and Jelly bean. I planted in the beginning of June and was starting to think mine were not going to ripen either, but, lo and behold, I was blessed! Glad I read this forum and had the patience that was recommended!
Stacy

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