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My tomato is flowering, and it has been for almost 2 weks now, yet there is not a single tomato starting yet. The flowers bloom, stay open for a few days, and then they turn brown and die.... Do I need more than 1 tomato plant for it to make fruit? I thought they sold single hanging tomato plants at walmart and k-mart? so I thought I could do the same.

Well any ideas?

Thanks

2006-06-29 10:59:08 · 7 answers · asked by profoundarkness 2 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

7 answers

You don't need two tomato plants to produce tomatoes. The problem is probably "Blossom Drop" which is usually a weather-related issue.

If it's too cool and wet or too hot and dry, the blossoms will dry up and fall off your tomato plant prematurely. There's not much you can do about the weather except wait until it stabilizes or gets better.

Blossom drop can also be caused by a magnesium deficiency. Either spray the plant with a seaweed extract or try applying Epsom salts to the soil at a rate of two to three tablespoons per plant. Too much high-nitrogen fertilizer is another fairly common problem, which leads to lots of foliage, but little or no fruit.

2006-06-29 11:24:23 · answer #1 · answered by Christin K 7 · 4 0

you're saying you stay in Alaska. i do not comprehend if it really is real or no longer, yet my aunt used to inform us that tomatoes do not placed on fruit until eventually the nighttime temps are contained in the 70s. we stay in Alabama. Do human beings advance tomatoes in Alaska? have they were given a similar problem you're having? Is your tomato in a greenhouse? if so, you've at hand pollinate it. you should use an artist's brush, or try shaking the tree very gently to scatter the pollen. To pollinate with a broom, gently contact each bloom middle with the comb, after doing each bloom, carry the comb over the plant and shake off any pollen left on it. good success.

2016-11-30 00:19:55 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Tomatoes take more than two weeks to harvest. First are they getting the right amount of light, bugs or bunnies even birds could be getting to your plant. If you go to Martha Stewart.com and go to encyclopedia of plants, she tells you all the type of tomatoes that you can grow, which each one needs, and what problems come when planting and the length of time to harvest in your zone where you live. Planting is patience, good luck.

2006-06-29 11:08:21 · answer #3 · answered by M360 3 · 1 0

You need at least to plants to bare fruit (cross pollination) the fruit is a seed pod (baby tomato plants) OK?

2006-06-29 11:18:15 · answer #4 · answered by uncle bob 4 · 0 1

your tomato plant maybe getting to much nitrogen.it may be a pretty healthy plant but with to much nitrogen it won't produce fruit

2006-06-29 11:56:09 · answer #5 · answered by mary p 1 · 0 0

try using a miracle gro and make sure they are getting enough sun and moisture

2006-06-29 11:59:37 · answer #6 · answered by stargateducky 1 · 0 0

not enough water to hold bloom

2006-06-30 03:44:28 · answer #7 · answered by diggin_thedirt 4 · 0 1

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