When do you guys plant your tomato plants?
Here's a picture, the one on the left is a Purple Cherokee, 4" pot (largish) plant purchased and planted mid-June. On the right is a Viva Italiano (same size original plant) purchased and planted mid-May.
(In between is a red bell pepper plant, also planted mid-May. Perhaps overshadowed by the tomato).
I think I'm mostly planting too early. I planted most of my tomatoes mid-May - and we had no cold nights at all post planting, but it took quite a while to get HOT out.
I have Brandywine, Sweet 100, Early Girl and those Viva Italias that are horribly small plants, producing early, but the tomatoes are not great tasting. Last year all my plants were like this - I thought it was the drought (but I did water) but now think I just planted too early.
I have that Purple Cherokee and one Jet Star also planted mid-June. The Jet Star was just a tiny plant at purchase, and last week I ate a few absolutely delicious tomatoes from it.
I planted these two late as an experiment, since I had such a bad year last year.
I know the first year I grew tomatoes I planted mid-June and everyone I knew called me crazy late, but I hadn't gotten around to it earlier (started from seed that year). That was my best tomato year by a long shot.
So how early can I get away with planting? First week of June, maybe??? Or is it best to just hold out to mid June, get honking plants with lots of tasty tomatoes, albeit a little late? Or not even late (though someone posted getting Purple Cherokees already, and I think mine will be 3 weeks from now).
Also, which garden centers actually have good selection mid-June? I know Platt Hill in Bloomingdale has pushed me to planting early, big and heirloom plants only being sold in early May, by June they're gone and you might as well have gone to Home Depot.
Pasquesi's in Barrington is where I was able to get a big Purple Cherokee in mid-June - but I could tell their selection was starting to get kinda thin.
Nancy