On 8/3/2014 9:49 AM, Gus wrote:
> "MaryL" > wrote in message
> ...
>>
>>
>> "Gus" wrote in message ...
>>
>> "Ed Pawlowski" > wrote in message
>> ...
>>> On 8/2/2014 10:01 PM, Gus wrote:
>>>> I have 8 plants and 7 all have had a decent number of tomatoes, but one
>>>> plant has not had any. It is the plant that has grown the best and
>>>> biggest and looks the healthiest. It's actually huge-- over 6 feet
>>>> tall, and filled out well. Has had lots of flowers, but not one tomato.
>>>> It's in the same spot as I had one last year that produced many
>>>> tomatoes. I'm confused why this one plant is not growing any tomatoes,
>>>> and it is the biggest and healthiest of the lot.
>>>
>>>
>>> It is biggest and healthiest because all of its enerfy is making
>>> leaves, not fruit.
>>
>>
>> What do you suggest? What Mary said? Cutting back some of it? It has
>> plenty of flowers and has for last couple months.
>>
>> ~~~~~~
>> My first thought was actually what Ed suggested, but I rejected that
>> idea when I noticed that the plant has flowers. If it was all
>> foliage, I would suspect too much nitrogen.
>>
>> MaryL
>
> I'm going to try hand pollinating some. Not had to do before. I have
> some Qtips that I'll try using. I'm so ignorant I didn't even know
> their are male and female flowers. In the past, I just planted some
> plants and they all produced without doing much than watering once in a
> while.
>
> http://vegibee.com/index.php/hand-pollination
Forget that Q-Tip and use a feather, any kind of feather. Just quickly
tickle each flower, that should not take very long.
Becca