Tomato terminology
If you’re new to growing tomatoes, it’s worth getting familiar with some of the terminology. For a start, there are several different types of tomato: salad tomatoes, (the round, red, average-sized tomato you’ll see in supermarkets), small, tangy, sweet cherry tomatoes, oval plum tomatoes with few seeds, ideal for cooking, and large, juicy, flavoursome beefsteak tomatoes.
Tomato plants are divided into cordon and bush types, depending on how they grow. Cordon tomatoes (also sometimes called ‘indeterminate’ tomatoes) grow tall, producing one main stem that needs to be trained up a cane or other support. Bush tomatoes, as the name suggests, grow into short, bushy plants. They don’t need training, but may need some additional support when laden with fruit. Bush tomatoes are sometimes also called ‘determinate’ tomatoes. Here are a few tomato varieties to look out for:
- Tomato ‘Alicante’: a high-yielding cordon tomato
- Tomato ‘Big Boy’: a full-flavoured beefsteak cordon tomato
- Tomato ‘Shirley’: a popular high-yielding cordon tomato
- Tomato ‘Gardener’s Delight’: a cordon type bearing tangy cherry tomatoes
- Tomato ‘Tumbling Tom’: a bush type with masses of tasty cherry tomatoes
Where to grow tomatoes
Growing tomatoes in greenhouses gives you a longer growing season, and also reduces the risk of diseases such as blight, but tomatoes can also be grown outside in a sheltered, sunny spot.
They can be planted directly in the ground, in a rich, fertile, well-drained soil, or grown in pots filled with good multipurpose compost.
Equipment list for growing tomatoes
To grow tomatoes at home in your garden, you will need:
- 9cm pots for sowing seeds
- 25-30cm diameter pots (if growing tomatoes as container plants)
- General-purpose balanced liquid feed such as Miracle-Gro Performance Organics All-Purpose Plant Food
- Tomato feed such as Tomorite Liquid Tomato Food
- Multipurpose compost such as Miracle-Gro Premium All Purpose Compost
- Canes
- String
- Dibber
- Spade
How to grow tomatoes from seed
If you have a heated greenhouse, you can start sowing tomatoes in late winter. Otherwise sow indoors in early spring.
- Fill 9cm pots with multipurpose compost.
- Sow a seed on top of the compost in each pot, then cover it lightly with a thin layer of compost.
- Water the pots, cover with clingfilm and place in a greenhouse or on a sunny windowsill.
- Once the seeds have germinated, remove the clingfilm. Water the pots regularly to keep the compost moist.
- When the seedlings are about 15cm tall, plant them in their final locations.
How to plant tomatoes outdoors
- Check the weather report before deciding when to plant tomatoes outdoors and wait until all danger of late frosts is past, usually around late May or early June.
- Before planting, prepare the ground by digging in lots of compost or well-rotted farmyard manure.
- Harden seedlings off for a week before planting outside, by putting the seedlings outside in their pots during the day and bringing them back inside at night.