As a tomato grower (hobby ofc) I can only recommend: Don't be impatient in the end. I know we all want to harvest the tomatoes and then we trick ourselfes to believe that its ready for harvest. But no - it should be red. Why? Because otherwise it tastes like in the supermarket. The amazing thing about home grown tomatos, is that you can let them on the plant until they are really ripe and oh my gosh, the taste is divine. My brother and me both had tomato plants. He picked his quite early and he was very surprised, how sweet and fruity mine were. Often he told me "but they are ready, why don't you pick them?" "No" I said, "they need to be red". I left them easily 3 extra weeks. So worth it :).
@@christrickett3291 just google a bit about the plants needs and it will make u happy. What ph level do they need, do they sproud in the dark or light? How much nutrients do they need? Generally plants need Nitrogen as long as they grow green and stick material. When they start to get flowers and then fruits: Potassium and Phosphorus (its called NPK system).
@@Nick4b11 so the bland supermarket kind are picked in the mature green stage (taste profile not fully developed), hard and don't bruise during shipping...then when reached the sale destination they are gassed with ethylene to make them turn red...tomatoes should be picked when the reach breaker stage...at this point the tomato fruit is sealed off from the stem and has turned more than 50% red (tomatoes ripen from bottom of fruit to the stem)...pick them at this stage and place them in a cool semi-dark area away from direct sunlight. they will produce their own ethylene gas for ripening...and you will have a wonderful tasting tomato...AVOID TOMATOES GROUPS AT THE STORE STILL ON THE VINE AND BRIGHT RED...THESE TOMATO "VINES" ARE CUT IN THE MATURE GREEN STATE, FLAVOR PROFILE IS NOT FULLY DEVELOPED AND GASSED TO TURN RED...HENCE BLAND TOMATO...
@@rapidlapse or i think you can cut a leaf or a branch and replant it to a new pot and it will grow Edit:i think its called natural vegetative propagation its grade 6 science sorry i forgot the name
As a home grower I've found this video is amazing! Thank you very much for doing this :) I'm growing tomatoes as well, S. Marzano, but it's nor heirloom, it saved the seeds from supermarket's tomatoes! Probably it's a hybrid, let's see! Seedlings germinated in 4-5 days and now they're 5cms tall. Finger crossed :) To have more tomatoes it's probably better to switch the fertilizer which is higher in potassium than nitrogen, so the plant can concentrate on producing fruits. Also to fruit they need a little bit higher temp (24-28) and also a huge amount of light! (21 DLI)
Great to hear, all the best! Keep me updated :) I grow just for fun, to record timelapse of their evolution. I used fertilizers and also had plant lights but at one point I over-watered and it took a few days just to recover from it. In the end it had a few fruits and many flowers so it was all worth the wait I guess.
Hope this dispels some myths; 1.) heirloom seeds are open-pollinated varieties that have tested true to type through time by growing successfully in a region for many generations. They also have cultural relevance and importance. As time passes, more varieties will fall into the “heirloom category.” Heirloom seeds are not always the best choice for growing in difficult conditions like extreme weather or short seasons. 2.) Open-pollinated seeds naturally cross with forces of nature like pollinators, insects, and wind. Their offspring tends to be true to type (similar to parents) and stable. All HEIRLOOM seeds are open-pollinated. Interestingly (and somewhat confusingly), not all open-pollinated seeds are recognized as heirlooms because they are new offspring of plants. But with time, they can be considered heirloom. 3.) hybrids are “cultivars that are produced by human interaction and manipulation.” A hybrid is a cross between two or more unrelated inbred plants that produce an unstable offspring, which means that in nature, these two plants could breed together but typically do not, and human involvement helps this process along. Hybrids are not genetically modified and pose no environmental or health issues. Modern agriculture is built on the use of hybrids for their uniformity and productivity.
your comment about switching to a fertilizer higher in potassium...you should have a good understanding of the difference between NPK and NPK RATIO TO DETERMINE % BY WEIGHT OF THE NPK...The following will help you convert to % P and % K: Commercial fertilizer usually have PK in the following forms: Phosphorus Pentaoxide P2O5 consists of 56.4% oxygen and 43.6% phosphorus by weight. To get the % P value, multiply the reported NPK value by 0.436, or approximately half of the reported value. K2O consists of 17% oxygen and 83% potassium by weight. To get the % K value, multiply the reported NPK value by 0.83. Using this information you can see that a fertilizer NPK number of 10-10-10 contains 10% nitrogen, 4.36% phosphorus, and 8.3% potassium. These conversion numbers will help you determine the correct amount of fertilizer to add to your garden so that you meet the soil test requirements. PLANTS USE NPK NUTRIENTS IN THE FOLLOWING CONCENTRATIONS FOR OPTIMAL GROWTH 3-1-2...
If you plan to grow fruit bearing plants indoors dont forget to manually polinate. I see these videos and always see amateur gardeners comment their opinions about why they dont reach full fruit production indoors when the answer usually boils down to a lack of pollination. There are no pollinators indoors so obviously its a process that needs done by hand. Fortunately tomato plants are double sex plants. They produce male and female flowers so it can pollinate itself. To manually pollinate a tomato plant wait for the flowers to reach peak growth than give your plant a gentle shake (before watering not after). This will release the pollin into the air and increase the likelihood of self pollination. Do this a few times as new flowers form. Pollination is very important in fruit production and significantly increases yield. Otherwise your plant will only produce parthenocarpic fruit. Happy gardening.
Hahaha i was dying laughing at this. One fruit! And you were pumped about it. Good on you!! Soooo in order for you to get a much better harvest i would cut more suckers off the crotch of the branches so it doesnt spend all its energy on leaves vs fruit. Also one BIG thing to help you is that tomatos have male and female in the flowers so can self start the tomatoes, however they require movement. When planted outside in the wind thats what happens. But since you did this indoors you will need to simulate wind or a bumble bee. I use an electric toothbrush to shake the flowers and boom much more fruit. Good luck.
Thanks, I know this might be the lowest ROI as far as harvesting goes 😁 but it was a fun project! I did use paint brush to manually pollinate the flowers. It’s not shown in the video. I’m working on more plants right now. Hopefully you’ll get to see better harvests in the upcoming videos :)
Its a determinate plant. U dont cut off any branches. But the fertilizer had to be higher in potassium instead of nitrogen to get more fruits. And definitely more light
@Brian Corea ah yes. I didnt see that, im so used to cherry tomato plants being indeterminate nice catch. Never grown tiny tim before. I usually grow sunsugars and sungolds and of course the classic supersweet 100s.
The mission of getting a time lapse (which has to be indoor in a controlled environment) is at odds with the mission of getting a lot of tomatoes. And of course you only need one to show how a tomato fruit develops.
I’m currently growing tomatoes,after 71 days I have around 14 tomatoes per seed , i focus on the plants a lot to get more yield , I guess the main thing was to take of the (legs) so between the stem and the main leaves I pluck the legs that grow out the stem so the the plant can focused more on the tomatoes and also helps the plant to grow up instead of outwards.
What you are taking off are called the "suckers" and you should only pluck it the first feet of the tomato plant, the suckers can turn into flower stems and therefore you would get more tomatoes. Dont pluck them unless the plant gets out of control.
@@WilliamGA yea they are called suckers , I pluck them of as I want my plants to grow up tall and not out they are about 6 ft now with about 24 tomatoes was h plant , doing really well
Tomatoes are not as easy to grow from seed as many people think i grew it from seed this year and many leaves died because of overwatering. Luckily when i noticed the reason it came back
I have to water mine everyday because they are left outside in blazing heat and get dry everyday They are growing exponentially and impressed a couple people who want me to grow some for them, I warned them it’s a little late in the season and you may have to buy a grow light and take them inside when it starts getting cold and snowing Plants are Atleast 5 feet tall have like 20 of them all grown from seed. Very easy and fun for beginners
Mine are alot smaller but mostly cuz I have 6 tomato plants in one pot so over watering hasn't been an issue but under watering. I make sure to give them loads of water every 3 days. Just 3 days ago one of them started fruiting so I can't wait!!!
I bet that tomato was delicious! We had 2 tomato plants in our back yard and they put out 113 tomatoes between the two of them in one season! 113! I counted only the ones that were good enough to eat!
Just needs more sunlight, probably some fertilizer and a bigger container. I think Tiny Tim is indeterminate tomato plant which needs the suckers plucked off to place more energy on the flower/fruit energy as opposed to the leaves. You’re doing an amazing thing and got me interested in trying this strain! Currently I am Growing Roma, Black Cherry, Cherry Falls, and another one I can’t seem to remember along with my jalapeño plant. Thanks again for sharing these!
Tiny Tim is a determinant dwarft tomato, so pruning suckers wouldn't have done anything. If I had to guess, it's that growing indoors without a lot of airflow means that some flowers don't pollinate. In the video it shows quite a few flowers that didn't become fruit
Watering depends on many factors. If the plant is in garden (not container) where it gets plenty of sun you can water daily without problem. If it is in a container, take caution do not overwater. It can cause root rot. That’s what happened in my case. Only water when the soil looks dry.
Soil should be moist but not drenched/soaking wet. Under watering is better than over watering. If you under water, the soil will look dry and leaves will start drooping. You should water more if you notice that. On the contrary leaves will go yellow and fall off if over watered continuously. That is due to root rot. My suggestion would be to water little by little and observe what happens. It’s a balancing act but not too difficult.
Tomatoes have to be the number 1 easiest thing in the world to grow. And for those of you wondering don't ever think you can't grow tomatoes in pots because you absolutely definitely can. I grow them in pots every year and have Giga harvests =)
How relaxing is this?! I'm doing plum style San marzanos going traditional with some tomato sauce olive oil and crush garlic,basil rao"s can suck it. At least until I run out of my sauce. 😎
informasi yang luar bisa, mendapat banyak pengetahuan tentang cara membuat usaha penanaman tomat yang sangat subur dan menghasilkan banyak buah sehingga mendapatkan hasil maksimal. Perlu banyak belajar lagi dari video ini, terima kasih informasinya untuk berbagi informasi sesama pecinta tanaman indonesia
I did not remove anything in this timelapse project. Everything is intact until the end. My goal was to film tomato seed turning into fruit and tell a story via timelapse. I wasn’t planning on maximizing harvest as you can see in the end - I was beyond excited to harvest just one tiny tomato. 😊
Life is so beautiful. Emerging almost from nothing.... Can you please tell us what lights U have used especially in the flowering and fruit-making stage? Thank you very much!
For this video I used a generic LED light strip. Temperature 5000K and power 60W if that helps. I have now upgraded my setup to Spider Farmer LED grow lights for my current projects and the plants have been growing very well so far. Will post timelapse videos once they reach harvesting stages. 🤞
@@rapidlapse thank you for your answer. So ypu say that a plant can make flowers under a 5k led? I ask because on internet is so much contradiction. ..
It might depend on the type of LED used. If you see my marigold and zinnia flower timelapse videos, they were grown under the 5000K LED. But I also had another LED light a long time ago that didn’t work. To find which one works is a bit of trial and error. If you are looking for guarantee just get a plant grow LED instead. They are certified to grow plants.
It depends on the pot size. You should water just enough so that the soil is not too dry. Over-watering is worse than under-watering. For the pot I used, I was watering every other day i.e. 3-4 times per week.
That's a great idea! I might try in future. My goal was to capture the plant and transformation in best detail possible. Putting a plastic bottle would create reflection and uneven lighting for the camera.
hey i was wondering if you have any fertilezers you recommend my large cherry tomato (15 day's old with decent growth) doesn't have any plant food/fertilizer
I started tomatoes from seed way too late this year, but I found a purple cherry variety in an old seed pack and couldn't help myself. Still at seedling stage, hopefully a centipede doesn't get them and we have a mild winter...
I’m sure it will grow before the winter is here. In my case, I made a few mistakes which is why I believe it took so long to grow. If I had used a large pot with good soil and didn’t overwater it then it would have grown way faster and the yield would have been better too. Hindsight is always 20/20. 😊
@@rapidlapse Cherry tomato plants need at least a 10 gal pot at the minimum. Better be in the ground or a 20 gal pot for each plant. I grew tomato plants the previous years in the ground and I had too many tomatoes that I let them fell in the ground. This year I am having some big beefsteak and some cherry tomato plants that I bought from the stores are setting fruits now. But they are the ordinary varieties. The better varieties I bought seeds are still seedlings now, only about 5 weeks and just put in the ground. I am in California, so we don't have frost until after Thanks giving, so hopefully the better varieties can still make it. Your time lapse video is one of the best of this kind on YT, although your tomato production was very poor, due to small growing medium and not enough sunlight. Growing tomato plants to good production is not that hard, but making video clips like yours is. Keep up the good work.
Thanks, I am going to keep that in mind next time. Due to filming logistics and space constraints, I could not use 20gal pot and I film indoors in a light controlled environment to get good timelapse footage. I have recently upgraded my plant grow lights so I’m hoping for better harvests in future videos. 🤞
@@rapidlapse Getting some flowers and blooms. The random purple tomato seeds are growing up to look suspiciously like pepper plants. I think I got seed cucked. . 😆
Thank you for this video, its entertaining. In just curious about the camera set up. What is the time-lapse duration per day and the Frame per second setting. Thanks
This tomato plant was a determinate variety (no vines) and I read that pruning doesn’t help determinate ones. For the others, pruning improves yield and promotes growth. I haven’t made videos on that topic but you can find them on YT. All the best!
my cherry tomato is too tall with only two leaves now. am i doing something wrong? its still at a 2 leaf stage but its about 2-3 inches tall. Do i add more soil or do i adjust something? Note, its leaves are still small
They call it leggy when your starts stretch really tall because they are searching for a light source. This can be corrected easily by adding more dirt to your pot. You can add as much dirt as you want so long as you don't cover up those leaves, also keep leaves from touching soil to prevent diseases. The coolest thing about tomato plants is all the little hairs you see on the stem are potential roots so the more of the stem you bury the stronger the main stalk will become.
Another thing you can do to help your tomato is to take used egg shells, rinse them out, microwave for 2 minutes to kill any potential salmonella, then grind up the shells as fine as you can and use in your soil for extra calcium. Tossing a small handful of eggshells in the planting hole when you transplant it helps ensure you don't get blossom end rot when it fruits. Tomatoes are heavy feeders and need lots of nitrogen, but not too much. There's lots of organic ways you can feed your plant at home from kitchen scraps or you can buy at the store. The store bought is better only because you know how much of each nutrient is in it, whereas homemade is a crap shoot. Your best bet is to get an all purpose like a 10-10-10 and feed every couple of weeks. Follow the directions on the package also when they're younger go slow and low on amounts which you can easily do by diluting what you've already got. There's nothing wrong with synthetic fertilizers and they're more beneficial then organic because they're usually water soluble instant feeders whereas organic is a slow feeder, which is more for the soil then the plant.
Many of you asked for a full tomato timelapse video from seed to fruit. It took me almost 6 months to make this video but here it is finally. Enjoy! 😊
Wow I love these vids becuz I love plants!
Thank you for all you do
lol all that for a single cherry tomato harvest LOL D:
@@kushpaladin 😆🥲
This has to be my all time favourite video, that time lapse is truly appreciated thank you 🤗 🍅 🤗
As a tomato grower (hobby ofc) I can only recommend: Don't be impatient in the end. I know we all want to harvest the tomatoes and then we trick ourselfes to believe that its ready for harvest. But no - it should be red. Why? Because otherwise it tastes like in the supermarket. The amazing thing about home grown tomatos, is that you can let them on the plant until they are really ripe and oh my gosh, the taste is divine. My brother and me both had tomato plants. He picked his quite early and he was very surprised, how sweet and fruity mine were. Often he told me "but they are ready, why don't you pick them?" "No" I said, "they need to be red". I left them easily 3 extra weeks. So worth it :).
This is why I’m growing some lol I want that taste instead of the bland supermarket kind
I am up to 2 weeks on my balcony, all hit and miss really, planted about 8 different things and waiting to see what comes of it.
@@christrickett3291 just google a bit about the plants needs and it will make u happy. What ph level do they need, do they sproud in the dark or light? How much nutrients do they need? Generally plants need Nitrogen as long as they grow green and stick material. When they start to get flowers and then fruits: Potassium and Phosphorus (its called NPK system).
@@Nick4b11 so the bland supermarket kind are picked in the mature green stage (taste profile not fully developed), hard and don't bruise during shipping...then when reached the sale destination they are gassed with ethylene to make them turn red...tomatoes should be picked when the reach breaker stage...at this point the tomato fruit is sealed off from the stem and has turned more than 50% red (tomatoes ripen from bottom of fruit to the stem)...pick them at this stage and place them in a cool semi-dark area away from direct sunlight. they will produce their own ethylene gas for ripening...and you will have a wonderful tasting tomato...AVOID TOMATOES GROUPS AT THE STORE STILL ON THE VINE AND BRIGHT RED...THESE TOMATO "VINES" ARE CUT IN THE MATURE GREEN STATE, FLAVOR PROFILE IS NOT FULLY DEVELOPED AND GASSED TO TURN RED...HENCE BLAND TOMATO...
nope pick them somewhat orange, paper bag and let them ripe or bugs will get them
For an impatient, complete beginner like me,,,these video's are just what I needed!👌 thank you!❤
You’re welcome!
Same here, i was like grow its been 3 hrs already 😊
To get more fruit you need to cut some of the branches and leaves so the plant can put resources into growing more fruit.
Thanks for the suggestion. I should have done that to get more tomatoes. :)
Definite grow plants usually don't get pruned. Maybe it didnt get enough sunlight
Agreed I do that and get a lot of fruits
@@rapidlapse or i think you can cut a leaf or a branch and replant it to a new pot and it will grow
Edit:i think its called natural vegetative propagation its grade 6 science sorry i forgot the name
@@robloxboy3144 you mean a cutting, propagation is close enough to.
I love how much you clearly love your plants. It's so wholesome!
Thanks!
What a wonderful video! Thank you for taking the time to share with those of us who absolutely love gardening and the beauty of watching seeds grow!!
Thanks!
Sometimes it truely amazes me how beautiful nature actually is 😊
As a home grower I've found this video is amazing! Thank you very much for doing this :)
I'm growing tomatoes as well, S. Marzano, but it's nor heirloom, it saved the seeds from supermarket's tomatoes!
Probably it's a hybrid, let's see! Seedlings germinated in 4-5 days and now they're 5cms tall. Finger crossed :)
To have more tomatoes it's probably better to switch the fertilizer which is higher in potassium than nitrogen, so the plant can concentrate on producing fruits.
Also to fruit they need a little bit higher temp (24-28) and also a huge amount of light! (21 DLI)
Great to hear, all the best! Keep me updated :) I grow just for fun, to record timelapse of their evolution. I used fertilizers and also had plant lights but at one point I over-watered and it took a few days just to recover from it. In the end it had a few fruits and many flowers so it was all worth the wait I guess.
How did they grew ?
Hope this dispels some myths; 1.) heirloom seeds are open-pollinated varieties that have tested true to type through time by growing successfully in a region for many generations. They also have cultural relevance and importance. As time passes, more varieties will fall into the “heirloom category.” Heirloom seeds are not always the best choice for growing in difficult conditions like extreme weather or short seasons. 2.) Open-pollinated seeds naturally cross with forces of nature like pollinators, insects, and wind. Their offspring tends to be true to type (similar to parents) and stable. All HEIRLOOM seeds are open-pollinated. Interestingly (and somewhat confusingly), not all open-pollinated seeds are recognized as heirlooms because they are new offspring of plants. But with time, they can be considered heirloom. 3.) hybrids are “cultivars that are produced by human interaction and manipulation.” A hybrid is a cross between two or more unrelated inbred plants that produce an unstable offspring, which means that in nature, these two plants could breed together but typically do not, and human involvement helps this process along. Hybrids are not genetically modified and pose no environmental or health issues. Modern agriculture is built on the use of hybrids for their uniformity and productivity.
your comment about switching to a fertilizer higher in potassium...you should have a good understanding of the difference between NPK and NPK RATIO TO DETERMINE % BY WEIGHT OF THE NPK...The following will help you convert to % P and % K:
Commercial fertilizer usually have PK in the following forms:
Phosphorus Pentaoxide P2O5 consists of 56.4% oxygen and 43.6% phosphorus by weight. To get the % P value, multiply the reported NPK value by 0.436, or approximately half of the reported value.
K2O consists of 17% oxygen and 83% potassium by weight. To get the % K value, multiply the reported NPK value by 0.83.
Using this information you can see that a fertilizer NPK number of 10-10-10 contains 10% nitrogen, 4.36% phosphorus, and 8.3% potassium. These conversion numbers will help you determine the correct amount of fertilizer to add to your garden so that you meet the soil test requirements.
PLANTS USE NPK NUTRIENTS IN THE FOLLOWING CONCENTRATIONS FOR OPTIMAL GROWTH 3-1-2...
If you plan to grow fruit bearing plants indoors dont forget to manually polinate.
I see these videos and always see amateur gardeners comment their opinions about why they dont reach full fruit production indoors when the answer usually boils down to a lack of pollination.
There are no pollinators indoors so obviously its a process that needs done by hand. Fortunately tomato plants are double sex plants. They produce male and female flowers so it can pollinate itself. To manually pollinate a tomato plant wait for the flowers to reach peak growth than give your plant a gentle shake (before watering not after). This will release the pollin into the air and increase the likelihood of self pollination. Do this a few times as new flowers form. Pollination is very important in fruit production and significantly increases yield. Otherwise your plant will only produce parthenocarpic fruit. Happy gardening.
I pollinate using paint brush but not all flowers turned into fruits :)
3:13 is my favorite part, I would have strong urge to pluck the fruit or touch it everyday 😂 it is too cute!
Making timelapse videos is all about patience and filming this one needed a lot of it. The end result was worth though! 😊
Ya i have a habit of touching plants everyday i don't know how to stop
i’m
Hahaha i was dying laughing at this. One fruit! And you were pumped about it. Good on you!! Soooo in order for you to get a much better harvest i would cut more suckers off the crotch of the branches so it doesnt spend all its energy on leaves vs fruit. Also one BIG thing to help you is that tomatos have male and female in the flowers so can self start the tomatoes, however they require movement. When planted outside in the wind thats what happens. But since you did this indoors you will need to simulate wind or a bumble bee. I use an electric toothbrush to shake the flowers and boom much more fruit. Good luck.
Thanks, I know this might be the lowest ROI as far as harvesting goes 😁 but it was a fun project! I did use paint brush to manually pollinate the flowers. It’s not shown in the video. I’m working on more plants right now. Hopefully you’ll get to see better harvests in the upcoming videos :)
Its a determinate plant. U dont cut off any branches. But the fertilizer had to be higher in potassium instead of nitrogen to get more fruits. And definitely more light
@@briancorea9735 thanks, I will be careful about these things next time so I can have better and faster yield.
@Brian Corea ah yes. I didnt see that, im so used to cherry tomato plants being indeterminate nice catch. Never grown tiny tim before. I usually grow sunsugars and sungolds and of course the classic supersweet 100s.
The mission of getting a time lapse (which has to be indoor in a controlled environment) is at odds with the mission of getting a lot of tomatoes. And of course you only need one to show how a tomato fruit develops.
i love the way you comment the process your tomato below the video. it reminds me sm how i feel when start planting a something ಥ‿ಥ❤
this is so realistic- i’ve been watching time lapse videos because my tomato seed isn’t budding and it’s been a week! but i guess it can take longer!!
Seed packed said 90 days but it took double the time in my case. Hopefully your grows faster. All the best!
Finally a high quality fruit pregnancy video!
*tiktok ptsd intensifies*
Lolololol 😢😢😢 you secretly birthed a new category of pervs
I’m Growing the exact same plant atm ! My 🍅 plant is at the flowering stage! 🌱
All the best!
I love your commentary (in the video)
Thanks!
I liked how the fruit is inflating like a balloon :)
All that and what a tiny one bite of a tomato!
😂
Amazing. I love how you ate the tomato at the end hehe
Thank you 😀
Just started planting my own tomatoes. This was lovely to watch! Can't wait for my own tomatoes too :)
All the best!
Same here 😊
Did you get some fruit yet
Hi Rapid Lapse! I watched your videos at school. You deserve subscribers.
Thank you :)
It's so nice to read your experiences while watching the video! I'm also growing tomatoes and I'll be careful about these things. Thanks pal 👍🏻👍🏻
Thank you, and happy growing!
I’m currently growing tomatoes,after 71 days I have around 14 tomatoes per seed , i focus on the plants a lot to get more yield , I guess the main thing was to take of the (legs) so between the stem and the main leaves I pluck the legs that grow out the stem so the the plant can focused more on the tomatoes and also helps the plant to grow up instead of outwards.
What you are taking off are called the "suckers" and you should only pluck it the first feet of the tomato plant, the suckers can turn into flower stems and therefore you would get more tomatoes. Dont pluck them unless the plant gets out of control.
@@WilliamGA yea they are called suckers , I pluck them of as I want my plants to grow up tall and not out they are about 6 ft now with about 24 tomatoes was h plant , doing really well
on the positive side this sets a REALLLY low bar for amateur growers watching LOL
😆
Should be trending #1
Thanks, much appreciated!
that was really emotional😭😭
Thanks! The video will really help me with my plants! Happy growing!!
Took a lot of efforts, Nice video, Thanks for sharing RapidLapse
You’re welcome!
I love your tomatoes ;)
Thanks! 🙂
this video is so wholesome! 😊 keep up the good work
Thanks!
Amazing! The miracle of life and creation ❤
🙏
God of Allah.
@@davidschmidt1997No. God of Zeus
I find this so relaxing to watch
3:20 cute!!
check that dark line on your thumb nail, it could be health related. cool videos man. love em
Its very satisfy to watch how new life begin while more leaves this world
Tomato growth video is cool.Thank you for the good video.
Thank you!
I like plants
wow that was really cool to watch
Thanks!
Tomatoes are not as easy to grow from seed as many people think i grew it from seed this year and many leaves died because of overwatering. Luckily when i noticed the reason it came back
My experience was also the same. Lesson learnt: under watering is better than overwatering. 😁
tomatoes are plenty easy. they grow freely on their own accord out of my compost pile😂
Awesome video
Thanks!
Have a happy life🤗
I have to water mine everyday because they are left outside in blazing heat and get dry everyday
They are growing exponentially and impressed a couple people who want me to grow some for them, I warned them it’s a little late in the season and you may have to buy a grow light and take them inside when it starts getting cold and snowing
Plants are Atleast 5 feet tall have like 20 of them all grown from seed. Very easy and fun for beginners
Awesome, great to hear that. You can save some tomato seeds from this year’s harvest to grow next year as well.
Great way to learn things...lovely to watch.
🙏
Mine are alot smaller but mostly cuz I have 6 tomato plants in one pot so over watering hasn't been an issue but under watering. I make sure to give them loads of water every 3 days. Just 3 days ago one of them started fruiting so I can't wait!!!
Watching this makes me joyful ❤ thank you for your time and effory
I bet that tomato was delicious! We had 2 tomato plants in our back yard and they put out 113 tomatoes between the two of them in one season! 113! I counted only the ones that were good enough to eat!
Thanks for this im growing one now
All the best!
Just needs more sunlight, probably some fertilizer and a bigger container. I think Tiny Tim is indeterminate tomato plant which needs the suckers plucked off to place more energy on the flower/fruit energy as opposed to the leaves. You’re doing an amazing thing and got me interested in trying this strain! Currently I am
Growing Roma, Black Cherry, Cherry Falls, and another one I can’t seem to remember along with my jalapeño plant. Thanks again for sharing these!
Tiny Tim is a determinant dwarft tomato, so pruning suckers wouldn't have done anything. If I had to guess, it's that growing indoors without a lot of airflow means that some flowers don't pollinate. In the video it shows quite a few flowers that didn't become fruit
tiny tim is determinate, if he cut off the suckers he would've halved his harvest.
I just got my first red tomato!
Yay! Congrats 😊
@rapidlapse it isn’t that ripe yet..
Edit: I ate it
A 160 days to grow one little tomato? You're gonna starve to death 😂
I agree, this method of farming is unsustainable 😅
It's so cool I wish I had this
Thanks!
Italian Instrumental musics in 1 hour
That was fun to watch. Thanks
i have a tomato plant in my house too ❤
Love the captions!
Thanks 🙃
what a feast !
🤣
Thanks for this video and I know my plants 5 pots of tomatoes takes so many days fruit come out
I live in the Philippines and water it everyday, any specific tips you have for me?
Watering depends on many factors. If the plant is in garden (not container) where it gets plenty of sun you can water daily without problem. If it is in a container, take caution do not overwater. It can cause root rot. That’s what happened in my case. Only water when the soil looks dry.
great video dai! looking forward to next plant video.
Thanks!
Enjoyed your video!
Thanks! 😊
You said you watered it when it's required. How should I water it perfectly? Any suggestion?
Soil should be moist but not drenched/soaking wet. Under watering is better than over watering. If you under water, the soil will look dry and leaves will start drooping. You should water more if you notice that. On the contrary leaves will go yellow and fall off if over watered continuously. That is due to root rot. My suggestion would be to water little by little and observe what happens. It’s a balancing act but not too difficult.
This gives me motivation on my tomatoes
Is this fella grew indoor
My fellas who receive full sunlight can do better
Full sunlight is better. I grew mine indoors under plant lamps. They won’t grow well in the absence of direct light(either plant light or sunlight).
@@rapidlapse going back at this
My tomatoes are now blooming fruits
@@azander1958 hopefully you have more fruits than I did!
Nice honest grow. 👍
Thanks!
Tomatoes have to be the number 1 easiest thing in the world to grow. And for those of you wondering don't ever think you can't grow tomatoes in pots because you absolutely definitely can. I grow them in pots every year and have Giga harvests =)
💯
How relaxing is this?! I'm doing plum style San marzanos going traditional with some tomato sauce olive oil and crush garlic,basil rao"s can suck it. At least until I run out of my sauce. 😎
Thats so funny. I thought that tomato was big until you picked it
It is cherry tomato. They are tasty but tiny. 😆
Clearly a determinate variety since the flower stems came out of the stems.
Amazing 👍
Thanks!
Amazing video🥰😍
Thanks
at june 25 2023 i see this tomato plant the first time i see a fruit on a plant is was in Atlanta at i saw a pepper
informasi yang luar bisa, mendapat banyak pengetahuan tentang cara membuat usaha penanaman tomat yang sangat subur dan menghasilkan banyak buah sehingga mendapatkan hasil maksimal. Perlu banyak belajar lagi dari video ini, terima kasih informasinya untuk berbagi informasi sesama pecinta tanaman indonesia
Thank you 🙏
Verry nice
Thanks!
What I Do This type of tamato
So, just wait 160 days for one cherry Tomato ? 🥺🥺
Haha in my case it took long but normally if you have large container and plant during the normal season it will grow faster and better.
@@rapidlapse hahaha okay. Thanks for putting a little bit more hope to my tomatoes 😂😂 I was about this close 🤏🏻 on giving up today lol
did u remove suckers through out veg and flower cycles ?
I did not remove anything in this timelapse project. Everything is intact until the end. My goal was to film tomato seed turning into fruit and tell a story via timelapse. I wasn’t planning on maximizing harvest as you can see in the end - I was beyond excited to harvest just one tiny tomato. 😊
Life is so beautiful. Emerging almost from nothing.... Can you please tell us what lights U have used especially in the flowering and fruit-making stage? Thank you very much!
For this video I used a generic LED light strip. Temperature 5000K and power 60W if that helps. I have now upgraded my setup to Spider Farmer LED grow lights for my current projects and the plants have been growing very well so far. Will post timelapse videos once they reach harvesting stages. 🤞
@@rapidlapse thank you for your answer. So ypu say that a plant can make flowers under a 5k led? I ask because on internet is so much contradiction. ..
It might depend on the type of LED used. If you see my marigold and zinnia flower timelapse videos, they were grown under the 5000K LED. But I also had another LED light a long time ago that didn’t work. To find which one works is a bit of trial and error. If you are looking for guarantee just get a plant grow LED instead. They are certified to grow plants.
@@rapidlapse Thank you. I was hoping I do not need to buy grow lights. They are expensive and you need a lot of them if you have many plants.
Thank you🍅
I love growing plants! How do they sprout so fast?
You can use Cal-Mag to correct that deficiency Cody recommends the one w iron 💯 greener foliage nodes bro!
I am currently growing some tomatoes but powdery mildew is very difficult to get rid off
Water the soil not the leaves
Im growing so many of these right now
All the best!
Do we have to watered daily
It depends on the pot size. You should water just enough so that the soil is not too dry. Over-watering is worse than under-watering.
For the pot I used, I was watering every other day i.e. 3-4 times per week.
i love to plant!
at the beginning you can put plastic bottle on it so it keep the heat inside and grow faster 😊
That's a great idea! I might try in future. My goal was to capture the plant and transformation in best detail possible. Putting a plastic bottle would create reflection and uneven lighting for the camera.
that's the same type of tomato that my garden has
hey i was wondering if you have any fertilezers you recommend my large cherry tomato (15 day's old with decent growth) doesn't have any plant food/fertilizer
I use Ocmocote slow release fertilizer bought from store. It works fine.
Tickle your tomato flowers (gently) for more pollination/fertilisation = more fruit. Bugs/wind do this for you when plants are outdoors.
I used paint brush to pollinate some of the flowers which is not shown in the video. 😊
Nice content ... cherry tomatoes usually bear a bunch of fruits but probably this couldn't get the right conditions
It needed pollinators!
I didn’t have bees around but I used toothbrush and paint brush to help pollinate. Maybe it wasn’t enough.
I started tomatoes from seed way too late this year, but I found a purple cherry variety in an old seed pack and couldn't help myself. Still at seedling stage, hopefully a centipede doesn't get them and we have a mild winter...
I’m sure it will grow before the winter is here. In my case, I made a few mistakes which is why I believe it took so long to grow. If I had used a large pot with good soil and didn’t overwater it then it would have grown way faster and the yield would have been better too. Hindsight is always 20/20. 😊
@@rapidlapse Cherry tomato plants need at least a 10 gal pot at the minimum. Better be in the ground or a 20 gal pot for each plant. I grew tomato plants the previous years in the ground and I had too many tomatoes that I let them fell in the ground.
This year I am having some big beefsteak and some cherry tomato plants that I bought from the stores are setting fruits now. But they are the ordinary varieties. The better varieties I bought seeds are still seedlings now, only about 5 weeks and just put in the ground. I am in California, so we don't have frost until after Thanks giving, so hopefully the better varieties can still make it.
Your time lapse video is one of the best of this kind on YT, although your tomato production was very poor, due to small growing medium and not enough sunlight. Growing tomato plants to good production is not that hard, but making video clips like yours is. Keep up the good work.
Thanks, I am going to keep that in mind next time. Due to filming logistics and space constraints, I could not use 20gal pot and I film indoors in a light controlled environment to get good timelapse footage. I have recently upgraded my plant grow lights so I’m hoping for better harvests in future videos. 🤞
@@rapidlapse Getting some flowers and blooms. The random purple tomato seeds are growing up to look suspiciously like pepper plants. I think I got seed cucked. . 😆
Superb
question did the blossoms start out black and than turn yellow my blossoms are black.
How many photos do you take aday when doing this one
I take 1 photo frame every 5 minutes while recording, then I speed it up further post processing.
Thank you very much for sharing this... So much appreciated your effort 🙏🏻
throw in table spoon of lime/ground up egg shells for every gallon potting mix and feed it every week or 2 tomato would do a lot better.
Thanks
Growing a cherry tomato in my house
We can call this as Life of Tambatiyas 😂😂
Thank you for this video, its entertaining. In just curious about the camera set up. What is the time-lapse duration per day and the Frame per second setting. Thanks
I take 1 frame every 10 minutes during filming. It is then sped up 10-20x during post production.
Complete beginner here, is there a video or link where i can learn how to properly prune the plant?
This tomato plant was a determinate variety (no vines) and I read that pruning doesn’t help determinate ones. For the others, pruning improves yield and promotes growth. I haven’t made videos on that topic but you can find them on YT. All the best!
Pruning will help produce more fruit! 😊
my cherry tomato is too tall with only two leaves now. am i doing something wrong? its still at a 2 leaf stage but its about 2-3 inches tall. Do i add more soil or do i adjust something? Note, its leaves are still small
They call it leggy when your starts stretch really tall because they are searching for a light source. This can be corrected easily by adding more dirt to your pot. You can add as much dirt as you want so long as you don't cover up those leaves, also keep leaves from touching soil to prevent diseases. The coolest thing about tomato plants is all the little hairs you see on the stem are potential roots so the more of the stem you bury the stronger the main stalk will become.
Another thing you can do to help your tomato is to take used egg shells, rinse them out, microwave for 2 minutes to kill any potential salmonella, then grind up the shells as fine as you can and use in your soil for extra calcium. Tossing a small handful of eggshells in the planting hole when you transplant it helps ensure you don't get blossom end rot when it fruits. Tomatoes are heavy feeders and need lots of nitrogen, but not too much. There's lots of organic ways you can feed your plant at home from kitchen scraps or you can buy at the store. The store bought is better only because you know how much of each nutrient is in it, whereas homemade is a crap shoot. Your best bet is to get an all purpose like a 10-10-10 and feed every couple of weeks. Follow the directions on the package also when they're younger go slow and low on amounts which you can easily do by diluting what you've already got. There's nothing wrong with synthetic fertilizers and they're more beneficial then organic because they're usually water soluble instant feeders whereas organic is a slow feeder, which is more for the soil then the plant.