(scroll down to the bottom of this thread for my gardening suggestions)
Amazing.
I have done vegetable gardens many times, over many years (sometimes with a large gap in years between gardens).
One of the plants I have always grown have always been tomatoes. I always did well with tomatoes in when I live in the foothills - maybe because of the ready availability of horse manure from my neighbor's across the road, maybe because the weather is just a tiny bit cooler there than it is here in the valley.
The first year - 2020 - I tried tomatoes here, I had about fourteen plants, maybe ended up with ten pounds of tomatoes - total, for the entire growing season. And it was HOT, and hot early, in 2020.
2021 wasn't much better - a few more tomatoes, but HOT HOT HOT.
I had always read that tomatoes require full sun, but by late afternoon on these really hot days I could see the tomatoes wilting as the 110 degree temps pounded down on them - no matter how much I watered.
2022, I changed my strategy - I planted my tomatoes near my wooden fence on the western side of my backyard - so they would be shaded by about 5:00 p.m. by the fence. BOUNTIFUL tomato harvest in 2022 - plenty to freeze. I finally ran out of frozen tomatoes in about March of this year (2023).
Also, the weather was MUCH cooler in 2022 at least in the beginning of the summer than it had been the two years previous - although the weather did warm up later in the summer.
This year, 2023, I planted my tomatoes within a foot or so of the fence, so they are getting into the shade by about 4:00 p.m. AND it has been unusually and remarkably cool so far this summer (I am LOVING it).
AND. . . I have never seen so many tomatoes on plants that I am growing in backyard in my entire life - even more tomatoes than I ever had in the foothills. Ever!!
There are large (still green) tomatoes almost everywhere I look - and more coming on!! I can't wait for tomato-eating ecstasy!! Oh, YUM!!
If all of these tomatoes actually ripen (keeping fingers crossed!) my freezer will fill up quickly, and I may be taking my organic tomatoes to the local food pantry!!
One major thing I have done differently this year than in years past: The tomato plant will grow very rapidly when conditions are just right. I have read that one needs to "prune" tomatoes, in order to achieve the maximum harvest. So I have been "pruning" my tomatoes, which consists of going out almost every day and just pinching off new growth. This theoretically forces the plant to put energy into flowering and fruiting, rather than in growing long vines.
I never did this in the past (I have grown tomatoes off and on for probably fifty years) and always got a good harvest when I lived in the foothills. I have thought on this a lot, and I am now wondering if the genetics of today's tomato varieties were different then than they are now - so that this pruning, or pinching off, is now required with newer tomatoes.
I dunno.
I have also learned - the hard way - to select heat-tolerant tomato varieties to grow, instead of just picking the reddest and juiciest-looking tomatoes out of the tomato catalog.
I am growing 5 different tomato varieties this year: Cherokee Purple (an heirloom tomato, with a flavor to die for), Celebrity, Mortgage Lifter (not doing so well as the others, will not try this variety again, Early Girl, a grape tomato (forget the name) and a "volunteer" cherry tomato of unknown lineage that just came up all on it's own.
For fertilizer I just use steer manure and grass clippings, that's it, nothing fancy. No herbicides, pesticides, or chemical fertilizers - so my tomatoes are 100% organic. Oh yes, I do generally also use a bag or two of Miracle Grow Potting Soil - but I think that is organic as well.
Or maybe this tomato abundance is all due to the lack of hot weather we have had thus far this year (hooray!) the hottest it has been has been the mid-90's, and only in these 90's for a couple of days. Mostly in the mid to high 80's so far this year. Today the high is predicted to be 77 degrees - unheard of for this time of year here in California's reliably hot-hot-hot central valley north of Sacramento!!
Had my first semi-ripe (couldn't wait) tomatoes off the vine yesterday. It was a grape tomato, not (yet) too sweet (because it wasn't quite ripe) but very yummy!!!
Cucumber plants blooming - I am again growing the Ashley variety this year, they have a wonderful and mild cucumber flavor - I can almost live on tomato-and-cucumber salad in the summertime!!
Anne