I don't care what they look like - I just want the tomatoes! I always plant indeterminate, usually Super Fantastic and a type or two of cherry tomatoes. But the question here is, will the spring planting of indeterminate tomatoes produce much of a crop in the fall after the heat of the summer. I didn't have much luck last year when I kept the same plants and trimmed them back a bit. Sometimes leaving them alone and letting that crop grow at the end of the plants is all that is needed, but it doesn't always work. Planting new in July means a fresh crop on less stressed and/or stretched out plants come fall.
_________________ Northwesterner
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