Do tomatoes like hot weather?
Category:
home and garden
landscaping
Tomato plants thrive in warm, sunny summer weather, but overly high temperatures stress the plant and slow production. Best growth and fruit set occurs between 65 and 85 degrees Fahrenheit.
Likewise, people ask, what Tomatoes grow best in hot weather?
Hybrid Tomatoes for Hot, Dry Climates
- Beefmaster Tomato. Hybrid, indeterminate, 80 days, deep red, beefsteak (16-32 ounces), resistance: VFNASt.
- Celebrity Tomato.
- Early Girl Tomato.
- Sweet 100 Tomato.
- Arkansas Traveler Tomato.
- Brandywine OTV Tomato.
- Burbank Slicing Tomato.
- Costoluto Genovese Tomato.
- Choose the right variety. Heat-tolerant tomato varieties like Heatmaster, Solar Fire, Summer Set, and Phoenix can form fruit even as temperatures climb.
- Plant in the right place.
- Make some shade.
- Add mulch.
- Pour on the water.
- Pick fruit early.
Accordingly, can it get too hot for tomatoes?
Daytime temperatures consistently above 90° F or night time temperatures consistently above 75° F create all kinds of stress for tomato plants. It's too hot for tomatoes to be pollinated. That means fewer fruit. But even more worrisome is the toll the heat takes on the plants.
When it's hot and dry, feel the soil at least twice daily, in the morning and afternoon. If the soil feels dry at a 1-inch depth, the tomatoes need water. During a heat wave, many plants might require twice daily watering so the soil doesn't become overly dry.