I bought three tomato plants about a month ago and planted them together in a 2X2 container.
I had no idea they were going to grow as large as they have. They are MASSIVE:shock: !
They have flowered and but only one of the three has put out fruit so far..... would it damage the plant if I moved one to its own container?
And tips on moving if its not too late?
You can move it, but it still may affect all 3 plants, depending on how much (if at all) the roots have intermingled. The less you disturb the roots, the less shock the plants will suffer.
Leaving it in place might not be the best option, either, however, because it will have to fight with the other 2 plants for nutrients and water. JMO.
Leaving it in place might not be the best option, either, however, because it will have to fight with the other 2 plants for nutrients and water. JMO.
- rainbowgardener
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I would separate them. If they don't even have fruit yet, they are still going to get a LOT bigger. And no matter how much you water them, they still will be competing for soil nutrients and tending to shade each other out. Also with less air circulation around all the stems and leaves, they will be more disease prone.
If you have a little pond or water feature that you can set the whole container in that would be great. Otherwise just water it until all the soil is totally soaked. At that point, you should be able to gently, pull the roots apart. Replant them ONE per container that size, with fertile soil and you should start getting lots of fruit....
If you have a little pond or water feature that you can set the whole container in that would be great. Otherwise just water it until all the soil is totally soaked. At that point, you should be able to gently, pull the roots apart. Replant them ONE per container that size, with fertile soil and you should start getting lots of fruit....
Yes, you DEFINITELY want to move them after seeing the picture. What sorts of tomatoes do you have? Do you know if they are determinate(growing to a specific size) or indeterminate(will grow as big as their habitat and season allows). Many tomatoes are indeterminate, in which case you will want the biggest pots possible, or you will be running into the same problem again.
James
James
So I moved one of the 3 tomato plants yesterday. I think the two I left in the container are going to be okay together.
The guy is in a pot all by his lonesome now... did okay yesterday, today he's sad and wilting..... I'm going to baby him and hope he perks back up.
Anything special I should do for him?
The guy is in a pot all by his lonesome now... did okay yesterday, today he's sad and wilting..... I'm going to baby him and hope he perks back up.
Anything special I should do for him?
- rainbowgardener
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- jal_ut
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Hi,
Hope your tomatoes do well.
Everyone who grows tomatoes needs to read this paper: [url=https://www.soilandhealth.org/01aglibrary/010137veg.roots/010137ch26.html]Click Here[/url]
This explains just how large the tomatoe's root system gets. It also gives you an idea of how much you handicap a tomato by growing it in a container.
Yes, indeterminate tomatoes can get very large. They will grow until they get frozen.
Hope your tomatoes do well.
Everyone who grows tomatoes needs to read this paper: [url=https://www.soilandhealth.org/01aglibrary/010137veg.roots/010137ch26.html]Click Here[/url]
This explains just how large the tomatoe's root system gets. It also gives you an idea of how much you handicap a tomato by growing it in a container.
Yes, indeterminate tomatoes can get very large. They will grow until they get frozen.