Check plants regularly and keep harvesting, so the
plants continue to produce throughout the fall. This also reduces
problems with insects and disease attacking overripe or rotting
fruit. Store the mature red tomatoes in cool, 45- to 50-degree,
conditions with high humidity and they’ll last about 7 to 14 days.
Consider pinching off the growing tip of indeterminate tomatoes now.
These plants will keep growing and producing new flowers and fruit
until the frost kills the plant. By pruning off the tip in September
the plant will direct its energy into ripening the existing fruit
instead of producing more tomatoes that won’t have time to mature.
When frost is in the forecast be prepared to protect your plants and
harvest. Cover plants with sheets, lightweight blankets or floating
row covers in the afternoon. All but the row covers must be removed
each day when the temperatures are above freezing. Since row covers
allow air, light and water through to the plants while trapping the
heat, they can remain in place until the end of the harvest season.
Once you grow tired of fighting the frost, consider picking any
tomatoes that are starting to show some color and allow them to
finish ripening indoors. The blossom end of the tomato should be
greenish white or starting to show the color of the tomato variety
you’re growing. Store green tomatoes in a cool 60- to 65- degree
location to extend their storage life.
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Spread out the tomatoes on heavy paper or wrap them
individually in newspaper so the fruit do not touch. This prevents
one rotten tomato from spoiling nearby fruit.
The green tomatoes will ripen over the next few
weeks. Speed up the process by moving a few tomatoes to a bright,
warm location a few days before they're needed.
Next season consider growing some short season
tomatoes like Fourth of July that start producing fruit earlier in
the season. Extend your enjoyment by growing a few tomato varieties
such as Garden Peach, Golden Treasure, Long Keeper and Reverend
Morrow’s Long Keeper that last longer in storage.
And don't let the rest of the green tomatoes go to waste. You can
use them for frying, chow chow, green salsa and other tasty treats.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including
Small Space Gardening and The Midwest Gardeners Handbook. She hosts
The Great Courses How to Grow Anything DVD series and the nationally
syndicated Melinda’s Garden Moment TV and radio segments. Myers’
website, www.MelindaMyers. com,
features gardening videos, podcasts, audio tips and monthly
gardening checklists.
[Photo credit: Melinda Myers, LLC]
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