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Simple Pruning Technique Improves Tomato Harvest

I've been gardening and writing about gardening for more than 20 years, yet I find I'm always learning new things about the plants, insects and other critters that call my backyard home. That's the great thing about gardening — it's never boring! I've worked as a landscaper, on an organic farm, as a research technician in a plant pathology lab and ran a small cut-flower business, all of which inform my garden writing. Someone once asked me when I'll be finished with my gardens, to which I replied, "Never!" For me, gardening is a process, not a goal.

How to prune early season tomatoes

Left on their own, tomatoes will grow into shrubby, multi-stemmed plants that topple under the weight of their fruit. Fruit and foliage are more prone to attack by pests and disease when they're sprawled on the ground. Pruning and using plant supports can help create healthier, more productive tomato plants.

Advantages to pruning:

Simple Pruning Technique Improves Tomato HarvestSuckers are the shoots that form where side branches meet stems.

Tradeoffs when pruning:

How to Prune

There are several ways to prune tomato plants, depending on the type of tomato and the support you use. As a rule, pruning is most helpful for indeterminate tomato varieties ? large plants that continue to grow taller and produce fruit until killed by frost. Determinate, or bush tomatoes, tend to be smaller and more manageable.

Most tomato pruning involves removing suckers ? the shoots that form in the axils where side branches meet the stem. Remove suckers when they're small by pinching them off or snipping them with pruners.

If your goal is to maximize the harvest, prune suckers sparingly. A good compromise is to remove all suckers that grow below the first flower cluster. This helps keep the main supporting stem strong, but it doesn't remove upper suckers that will eventually produce flowers and fruit.

Prune sparingly, too, if you live in a place with intense summer sun, which can cause sunscald on fruits (fruit with tough, thickened skin and discolored areas).

Simple Pruning Technique Improves Tomato HarvestPlants grown on Tomato Ladders and other narrow supports benefit from pruning.

How to prune tomatoes late in the season to encourage ripening.

Training Methods

If space in your garden is at a premium, or if you're supporting plants with tomato ladders or stakes, it's best to prune your tomatoes to one or two main stems. To do this, pinch out all suckers. Otherwise, suckers will grow into additional stems and create a wide, bushy plant. The remaining main stems will grow strong and sturdy and will be easier to secure to the supports' uprights with plant ties.

Gardeners using Tomato Cages or Tomato Towers to support plants often pinch out the suckers on the lower stems but allow suckers higher up on the plant to grow.

Simple Pruning Technique Improves Tomato HarvestWith Tomato Cages, it's good practice to leave some of the suckers on the higher branches.
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