| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Tomato question on Fig Forum (if I may?) |
| Author | Comment |
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mjbaransky
Registered: Posts: 64 |
Sorry, for posting an unrelated topic on here, but I am not a member of any other forum where I feel I can get a reply ;) |
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newnandawg
Registered: Posts: 2,535 |
If it were mine and it has "nubs" in the stem, I would cut it off just above the highest one of the "nubs." I would then give it |
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cis4elk
Registered: Posts: 1,719 |
Yep, I agree with Mike. I would cut it just above the nub where the main stem is still vertical. Or anthoer way of saying it would be cut it where it is starting to lean/bend, just above the nub sticking out to the right in the picture. |
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greenfig
Registered: Posts: 3,183 |
Out of curiosity, what variety is that? |
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figgary
Registered: Posts: 834 |
You can bury it deep, as greenfig said. Tomatoes will send roots out from the buried stem very quickly. You might also pinch the top if it is wilted beyond saving. Keep it watered and it should go for you. |
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mjbaransky
Registered: Posts: 64 |
Thanks everyone for the advice. |
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cis4elk
Registered: Posts: 1,719 |
Is Opalka productive for you? |
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hoosierbanana
Registered: Posts: 2,186 |
I like Rabbit's Foot. |
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rafaelissimmo
Registered: Posts: 1,473 |
I love to grow Mortgage Lifters, even though the weather constantly causes diseases in my tomato plants. |
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Chapman
Registered: Posts: 351 |
I'd cut the top off and hope for new leaves to sprout. No guarantee of it surviving, but give it a try. |
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drphil69
Registered: Posts: 803 |
You're 60/40 on survival, but the above advise was very good. Tomatoes are tough, as long as some tiny part of it is alive, it can make it. |
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JoAnn749
Registered: Posts: 1,184 |
I agree with the above!! |
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Rob
Registered: Posts: 550 |
No harm in trying. But after such a severe stress event, it may not produce as much, even if it manages to eventually recover. I had deer eat the top off of several of my tomato plants a couple weeks ago. Luckily I had not yet pruned off all the suckers, so now they should take charge. But it is a significant setback and will likely delay the crop. With tomatoes on the east coast, it's always a race against the clock with diseases and frost and whatnot, so a delayed crop probably means a smaller one. |
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jdsfrance
Registered: Posts: 2,591 |
Hi, |
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ohjustaguy
Registered: Posts: 324 |
Yes, bury deep. You by that from cross-country nursery/chileplants.com? Looks like it based on packaging... |
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