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intheflow

(28,898 posts)
Sun May 19, 2013, 12:33 AM May 2013

Question about spindly tomato plants.

Sooo.... we bought seeding tomato plants back before Easter, but the weather got so freakily frigid we couldn't plant them until last weekend. Now they're all spindly. They're showing some new growth on the existing leaves, but they will never flesh out like a healthy tomato plant should.

Here's my question: there's some vigorous, healthy new growth at the base of the plants. Can I just pinch off the spindly upper plant and give them a kind of reboot from the new growth at the bottom?

10 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Question about spindly tomato plants. (Original Post) intheflow May 2013 OP
you could... nebenaube May 2013 #1
I wouldn't prune them like that. beac May 2013 #2
Just plant them sideways NJCher May 2013 #3
They're already 2.5 feet tall, intheflow May 2013 #4
That's exactly the type of plant that should be buried neck-deep Gormy Cuss May 2013 #5
should have mentioned NJCher May 2013 #6
I'm giving it a shot! intheflow May 2013 #7
Plant them deep - tomatoes can put out new roots from the leaf nodes Retrograde May 2013 #8
You can do a few things.....see below NRaleighLiberal May 2013 #9
I ended up rooting planting them sideways. intheflow May 2013 #10

beac

(9,992 posts)
2. I wouldn't prune them like that.
Sun May 19, 2013, 03:32 AM
May 2013

Give them some time to bounce back.

I had some sad cold-shocked toms one April that recovered beautifully by June.

Good luck!

NJCher

(37,743 posts)
3. Just plant them sideways
Sun May 19, 2013, 10:21 AM
May 2013

Good diagram here.

http://earthworksgardens.blogspot.com/2012/04/how-to-plant-tomatoes-build-tomato.html

This way, any nodules (I think that's the right term) will root and your tomato will be bigger and have a better, more extensive root system.


Cher

intheflow

(28,898 posts)
4. They're already 2.5 feet tall,
Sun May 19, 2013, 11:38 AM
May 2013

with a foot between the healthy new growth at the bottom and new growth by the top leaves. I don't know that planting them sideways is really viable. But that's an interesting link for future food for thought.

Gormy Cuss

(30,884 posts)
5. That's exactly the type of plant that should be buried neck-deep
Sun May 19, 2013, 12:14 PM
May 2013

to convert all of that spindly area into roots. Either bury it in a deep hole or try to plant it sideways. I've done both with plants that tall and had success. Burying sideways is a little trickier.

Retrograde

(10,626 posts)
8. Plant them deep - tomatoes can put out new roots from the leaf nodes
Tue May 21, 2013, 03:01 PM
May 2013

Mine are still in their pots waiting to put on a few more inches, but here in the Bay Area I've found that no matter when I start them they don't produce until mid-September anyway.

NRaleighLiberal

(60,470 posts)
9. You can do a few things.....see below
Wed May 22, 2013, 04:16 PM
May 2013

You can cut the top 6 inches or so and root it in water (takes a week or so, sunny window), the pot it up and leave it in the shade for a week - you will have a clone of the plant. You can do the same with the sideshoots growing lower down. Tomato plants are tough - as others said, you can plant it very deep, or sideways - if you do, root one of the lower sideshoots just in case to have a back up.

intheflow

(28,898 posts)
10. I ended up rooting planting them sideways.
Wed May 22, 2013, 11:01 PM
May 2013

We had five plants. I was successful replanting four but broke the top off one just trying to move the tomato cage off it. There're some very vigorous lower leaves emerging from the stem, though, so I'm going to leave it there and see if it either recovers itself naturally or becomes another opportunity to plant it sideways. Tomato gardening is an adventure, for sure!

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