Pruning Indeterminate Tomatoes For Maximum Production In A Hoop ...

Here, we will walk you through how to prune and trellis to get the most from your plants. Each article in this series includes an accompanying video that shows the process in action. We start this four-part series with Nick from Bootstrap Farmer walking you through how to identify and prune indeterminate tomato plants. 

Before Nick came on at Bootstrap Farmer, he had a successful market garden where he grew tomatoes year-round in a 30-by-36 heated greenhouse using a Dutch bucket system. He also grew seasonal tomatoes in an unheated 30 by 100-foot hoop house, both bush varieties and indeterminate, as well as specialty tomatoes in outdoor raised beds. In these articles, we distill down his years of experience to help you increase your production and maximize your growing space. 

First, let's identify key parts of the tomato plant. 

Identifying the parts of a tomato plant

Crown - The top section of the plant. This is the area where you will select one strong sucker to continue the plant's vertical growth. Flowering will start in this section. 

Picture depicting top leaves of a tomato plants labeled, "crown."

Main Stem - The central stalk of the plant, often referred to as the leader. A single leader plant is developed when the grower chooses one sucker to continue growing and removes all others.

Bare stem of a tomato plant in a lower and lean trellis system labeled, "stem."

Shoulder or axil - Any junction of leaf and stem.

 

Sucker - An immature branch that grows out between the main stem and a shoulder.

Stem and shoulder of a tomato plant labeled, "axil/shoulder and sucker."

 

Leaf - Tomatoes have compound leaves made up of leaflets which are distributed along the leaf rachis (central leaf stem).  

Leaf of a tomato plant labeled, "leaf."

Flower cluster - Also known as an inflorescence, these are composed of a central branch with multiple smaller branches terminating in individual flowers. The number and arrangement of flowers in a cluster is dependent on many factors including variety and growing conditions.

Flower cluster of a tomato plant labeled, "flower cluster."

Fruiting cluster - A flower cluster that has been fertilized and is developing into ripe fruits. 

Backdrop of leaves with a fruiting cluster of ripening tomatoes. Labeled, "fruit."

Identifying the growing sections of a tomato plant

From top to bottom, each section of the trellised tomato plant has its job. Each of the four distinct zones will look dramatically different. This is because each section of the plant has a different job.

Infographic of the parts of an indeterminate tomato plant. The parts on the plant are labeled from top to bottom, "Crowning and Flowering, Fruit Set and Vegetative Growth, Fruit Harvest Zone, Bare Stem Racetrack, and root zone."

Crowning and Flowering 

In the top section, you will be teaching each of your plants to focus on a main stem and allow a single sucker to continue vertical growth. Below this crown point, additional suckers will be removed to discourage branching

Fruit Set and Vegetative Growth 

Directly below the crown. This is where the majority of photosynthesis will take place. Additionally, flower clusters will begin to set fruit and should be pruned to 4-7 fruits per cluster, depending on the type. Cherry tomato varieties can hold up to 7, larger fruits should be thinned to prevent too much weight on the fruiting branch.  

Fruit Harvest Zone

Harvesting happens below the vegetative section. In this area, you will remove most leaves to allow for better airflow and focus the nutrients on fruit ripening. This also helps streamline the harvesting process since you are not having to work around leaves to find fruit. 

Bare Stem Racetrack

This is where you have removed all the fruiting branches post-harvest. This section will be lowered to run parallel to the floor and wrap around the base of the plants or pots. These vines may be 50 to 70 feet long. We discuss lowering and leaning the vines in this article. 

Tools you will need for trellising and pruning your tomato plants

  • Support Structure
  • Qlipr trellis hooks to the support structure
  • Trellis line
  • Qlipr clips 
  • Pruners 
high tunnel row full of tall tomato plants

How to Prune Your Indeterminate Tomato Plants

Keep the bottoms of the plants free of foliage and old branches for proper airflow. Leave fruiting branches and some foliage higher up on the plants. Leave more foliage to shade developing fruits near the crown. This also provides plenty of photosynthetic energy to keep the plant growing.

Prune a day or two after harvest. Treat each section of the plant according to its particular job. Add clips as needed to support the vine. 

Bare Stem Racetrack

Remove all leaves and any branches left from harvested fruits. Create more bare stem to lower-and-lean in the next step. Remove everything below the next harvestable cluster

Fruit Harvest Zone

Remove all remaining leaf clusters except possibly those directly opposite a fruit cluster to focus the plant’s energy on ripening fruit. The increased airflow will also help mitigate pest pressure. If some clusters have fruit at dramatically different stages of ripening, prune off the smaller fruits. You should have 4-7 good fruits per branch, depending on size. Remove any misshapen or damaged fruit. 

Fruit Set and Vegetative Growth 

Remove:

  • All suckers from the main vine stem, including any emanating from a fruit cluster.
  • Extra flowers from any cluster with more than the desired 4-7 fruits.
  • Leaves with browning or pest damage.
  • Small branches that are forming from the shoulder points off the main stem. 

Crowning and Flowering 

Carefully attach the crown of the vine to your trellis line with a clip placed just below the lead sucker. If you are rehabbing a vine, you may leave an extra sucker to choose the best after another week of growth. Remove any suckers from leaf axils below this point. Keep all foliage in this section. 

What comes next for your tomatoes?

Now that you know how to identify the parts and prune an individual plant, you can proceed to the next steps for trellising tomatoes. Once a plant is pruned, you can move on to lowering and leaning. If you are getting ready to build a trellis and need help with supplies and design, feel free to skip ahead to part three, where we discuss trellising structures in the hoop house. Be sure and go back to lowering and leaning before your first prune so you have a plan in mind.

Already have your structures built but haven't pruned yet? Maybe the pruning got away from you for a few weeks? It happens on the farm, sometimes other tasks get in the way. Even if you feel overwhelmed by those wild plants, don't despair. In the 4th part of this series, we will go in-depth into the challenges and opportunities when pruning overgrown plants in a hoop house.

Why Aggressively Prune Indeterminate Tomatoes?

Why does Nick cut off so much? To those not used to pruning, the amount of foliage that he removes may seem aggressive. Tomatoes are resilient plants. When you remove excess leaves, spent clusters, and redundant suckers, you are teaching the plant how you want it to behave.

Pruning tells the vine where you want the energy focused. The techniques we describe here can also be used on outdoor plants. Note that trellised plants in direct sun will want a little more foliage left on to help protect the fruit from sunscald.  

Watch the Tomato Pruning Video

Also in this series:

  1. Building Trellis for Indeterminate Tomatoes
  2. Using the Lower and Lean Method for Indeterminate Tomatoes in a Hoop House
  3. Managing Overgrown Tomatoes

 

 

Tag » How To Prune Indeterminate Tomatoes