Training tomato plants

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Christan on Instagram: "Get rid of those suckers…but don’t throw them out! Make yourself another plant! These young tomato plants can be big producers, they just need to be trained to grow the fruit and not more leaves. It’s super easy to take one plant and make it into three or four.  #tomatoplant #makeanewplant #plantthatsucker #pruneyourplants #knowyourgarden" Training Tomato Plants, Tomato Plants, Tomato Plants Growing Tips, Tomatoes Plant, Tomato Plant Care, Pruning Tomato Plants, How To Grow Tomatoes, Tomato Plant, Growing Tomatoes

Christan on Instagram: "Get rid of those suckers…but don’t throw them out! Make yourself another plant! These young tomato plants can be big producers, they just need to be trained to grow the fruit and not more leaves. It’s super easy to take one plant and make it into three or four. #tomatoplant #makeanewplant #plantthatsucker #pruneyourplants #knowyourgarden"

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Sean Pessarra on Instagram: "This double leader technique encourages indeterminate heirloom or hybrid varieties to focus on fruit production. Using these techniques, I have grown 30 to 50 lbs per plant over the course of 3 months. 

This technique is perfect for southern growers where tomatoes struggle to make it through the heat or northern growers not using heated greenhouses. You will get a lot more tomatoes in a more condensed period. Then you can  follow them with later rounds of heat resistant tomatoes.
Note: only use on indeterminate tomato varieties. 

A single plant is trained to produce only two vines (through early topping) and each vine trellised up a single string and attached with clips. The early topping/decapitating helps encourage a strong connection of each vine at the ba Topping Tomato Plants, Plant Training, Tomato Varieties, Heating A Greenhouse, Growing Tomato Plants, Garden Prepping, Vine Trellis, Garden Tomatoes, Lake Garden

Sean Pessarra on Instagram: "This double leader technique encourages indeterminate heirloom or hybrid varieties to focus on fruit production. Using these techniques, I have grown 30 to 50 lbs per plant over the course of 3 months. This technique is perfect for southern growers where tomatoes struggle to make it through the heat or northern growers not using heated greenhouses. You will get a lot more tomatoes in a more condensed period. Then you can follow them with later rounds of heat…

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Kelly Devlin

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