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Tomato Cultivation — Full Package of Practices | KisanGuide
Vegetables · Solanaceae

Tomato — Package of Practices

A warm-season, high-value crop that rewards good staking, steady watering and timely protection with heavy, clean yields over a long picking season.

Botanical name
Solanum lycopersicum
Family
Solanaceae
Season
Warm (frost-sensitive)
Duration
110–150 days
Ideal temp.
21–27 °C
Soil pH
6.0–7.0
Yield
25–100 t/ha

Overview

Tomato is one of the most widely grown and most profitable vegetable crops in the world. It is a short-duration, warm-season crop that can be grown in the open field, under shade nets or in polyhouses, and it fits well into rotations because it gives quick returns. Success depends less on any single input and more on getting the basics right together — a healthy nursery, the correct spacing, balanced feeding split across the season, even moisture, and early, preventive plant protection.

Two plant habits matter when you choose a variety. Determinate (bush) types grow to a fixed size, set most of their fruit in one flush and suit open fields and machine or once-over harvesting. Indeterminate (vine) types keep growing and flowering, need staking, and give a longer, higher-yielding picking season — ideal where labour for tying and picking is available.

Climate & season

Tomato grows best at day temperatures of 21–27 °C with cool nights. Fruit set drops sharply below 10 °C and above about 35 °C, and very high temperatures cause flower drop and poor colour. The crop is frost-sensitive, so time transplanting to avoid frost and extreme heat at flowering.

  • Choose a season so that flowering and fruit set fall in mild weather.
  • In hot regions, use heat-tolerant hybrids and provide partial shade.
  • Long spells of cloudy, humid weather raise disease pressure — stay ahead with protection.

Soil & land preparation

Well-drained sandy loam to clay loam rich in organic matter is ideal, with a pH of 6.0–7.0. Avoid waterlogging, which invites root and wilt diseases.

  • Plough 2–3 times to a fine tilth and remove crop residues and weeds.
  • Incorporate 25 t/ha of well-rotted farmyard manure or compost before the last ploughing.
  • Mix in biofertilizers — about 2 kg/ha each of Azospirillum and Phosphobacteria blended with 50 kg of manure — to improve nutrient uptake.
  • For drip, form raised beds about 120 cm wide with the lateral down the centre; raised beds plus drip and mulch give the best results.
  • Follow a 2–3 year rotation away from other Solanaceae (chilli, brinjal, potato) to break pest and disease cycles.

Varieties & seed

Pick a variety to match your market and your conditions, not just yield. For fresh market, choose firm, well-coloured fruit with good shelf life; for processing, choose high-solids types; everywhere, prefer varieties with resistance to the diseases common in your area (leaf curl virus, bacterial wilt, early/late blight). Hybrids cost more in seed but usually give higher, more uniform yields and better disease tolerance; open-pollinated types let you keep seed but yield less.

Seed rate

  • Open-pollinated: 400–500 g/ha
  • Hybrid: 150–200 g/ha
  • About 1 g contains 250–300 seeds; one hectare needs roughly 15,000–18,000 healthy seedlings.

Seed treatment

  • Treat seed with Trichoderma viride 4 g/kg (biological) or Thiram / Captan 3 g/kg to prevent damping-off.
  • For bacterial diseases, a hot-water seed soak can help; use certified, disease-free seed wherever possible.

Nursery, transplanting & spacing

  1. Raise a healthy nursery. Sow in pro-trays (best) or on raised beds 15 cm high; cover seed lightly and keep moist and lightly shaded. Pro-trays give clean, uniform, transplant-ready seedlings with less disease.
  2. Care for seedlings. Water gently, protect from heavy rain and sun, and watch for damping-off. A light feed once true leaves appear keeps them growing.
  3. Harden before lifting. Reduce water and expose to sun for 4–5 days so seedlings toughen up.
  4. Transplant at 25–30 days (4–5 true leaves), in the evening, and water immediately. Discard weak or leggy seedlings.
  5. Spacing: 60 × 45 cm for a normal furrow crop; for drip, use a paired-row layout of 90 × 60 × 60 cm (wide path, then two close rows) so tying, spraying and picking are easy.

Nutrient management (drip fertigation)

This schedule follows a proven drip-fertigation schedule for tomato hybrids, rewritten as plain steps. The recommended dose is N–P–K 200 : 250 : 250 kg/ha. Fine-tune to your own soil test and local advisory.

Apply as basal (before planting)

  • Farmyard manure 25 t/ha, worked in before the last ploughing.
  • Azospirillum 2 kg/ha + Phosphobacteria 2 kg/ha, mixed with about 50 kg of manure.
  • 75% of the phosphorus as single superphosphate (≈ 1172 kg/ha) — phosphorus is given mostly basal because it moves poorly in soil and the wrong form can clog drippers.

Give through the drip (fertigation)

The rest goes through the drip with water-soluble fertilizers — all of the nitrogen, the remaining 25% of phosphorus, and all of the potassium. Irrigate daily, and deliver the fertilizer dose once every three days across the crop, building up through flowering and easing off after fruit set. Inject fertilizer mid-irrigation, then flush the lines with plain water.

StageCrop stageDays% N% P% KWater-soluble fertilizers
1Transplant to establishment~1010%5%10%19:19:19, 13:0:45, urea
2Flower initiation to flowering~3040%10%40%12:61:0, 13:0:45, urea
3Flowering to fruit set~3030%5%30%19:19:19, 13:0:45, urea
4From first picking onward~8020%5%20%12:61:0, 13:0:45, urea

Percentages are of the full recommended dose. Nitrogen and potassium are given 100% through the drip; only 25% of phosphorus is — the other 75% went on as basal superphosphate.

Across the whole crop this comes to roughly 19:19:19 — 132 kg/ha, 12:61:0 (MAP) — 62 kg/ha, 13:0:45 (potassium nitrate) — 500 kg/ha and urea — 223 kg/ha, on top of the basal superphosphate. For the exact product weight at each fertigation, follow the full published schedule.

Fertigation — keep it flowing

Use fully water-soluble fertilizers and keep a filter on the system. If you add a calcium fertilizer for fruit quality, give it on a separate day — calcium reacts with phosphates and sulphates and can form a solid that blocks the drippers.

Stop blossom-end rot: the sunken dark patch at the base of the fruit is a calcium problem made worse by uneven watering. Keep moisture steady and, if needed, supply calcium on its own fertigation day or as a foliar spray at flowering and early fruiting.

Irrigation

Tomato needs steady, even moisture — both drought and waterlogging hurt it. Flowering and fruit development are the critical stages; never let the crop dry out then.

  • Furrow: irrigate at transplant, then every 5–7 days depending on soil and weather. Drip: give short, light irrigation daily (this is also how fertigation is delivered).
  • Drip irrigation with mulch is best: it saves water, keeps leaves dry (less disease) and gives even moisture.
  • Avoid sudden swings from dry to wet — they cause fruit cracking and blossom-end rot.

Weeds & special care

  • Weeding: keep the crop weed-free for the first 45 days; 2–3 hand weedings, or use mulch to suppress weeds.
  • Pre-emergence option: a pre-emergence herbicide such as pendimethalin or fluchloralin (about 1.0 kg active ingredient/ha) sprayed a few days after planting checks early weeds — follow the label and local approvals.
  • Mulch: straw or plastic mulch controls weeds, conserves moisture and keeps fruit clean off the soil.
  • Staking/trellising: support indeterminate types once they reach 25–30 cm and tie weekly — this lifts yield and quality and cuts fruit rots.
  • Pruning: remove lower side-shoots and old yellow leaves to improve airflow and light; de-leaf the lowest leaves touching the soil.

Plant protection

Work the IPM way — start with healthy plants, clean fields, resistant varieties and traps, scout weekly, and use a chemical only when pests cross the level that causes real loss. Rotate chemical groups so pests don't become resistant, and always follow the product label. Detailed steps are in the Pest Management and Disease Library.

Major pests

PestDamageManage with
Fruit borer (Helicoverpa)Caterpillar bores into fruit, making it unsellablePheromone traps, hand-pick larvae, release Trichogramma, spray Bt or NPV; chemicals such as chlorantraniliprole / spinosad use sparingly
WhiteflySucks sap and spreads leaf curl virusYellow sticky traps, neem oil, remove infected plants; reflective mulch deters them
Aphids & thripsSuck sap, distort growth, spread virusesSticky traps, neem, conserve natural enemies; spot-spray only if severe
Leaf minerWhite tunnels in leaves reduce photosynthesisRemove mined leaves, sticky traps, neem; avoid over-spraying that kills parasitoids
MitesFine webbing, bronzing of leaves in hot dry weatherMaintain moisture, spray wettable sulphur or a recommended miticide

Major diseases

DiseaseSignsManage with
Damping-offSeedlings rot and topple in the nurseryTreated seed, raised beds, Trichoderma, avoid overwatering
Early blightBrown target-ring spots on older leavesRotation, remove debris, protectant fungicide (e.g. mancozeb) as needed
Late blightWater-soaked patches spreading fast in cool, wet weatherResistant varieties, good airflow, timely systemic fungicide
Leaf curl virusCurled, yellow, stunted leaves; little fruitControl whitefly, rogue out infected plants, use tolerant varieties
Bacterial wiltSudden wilting with green leaves; ooze from cut stemResistant varieties, rotation, raised beds, good drainage
Fusarium wiltYellowing and wilting from one side upwardResistant varieties, rotation, Trichoderma, soil health

Use chemicals safely

The products above are examples, not a prescription. Doses, approved crops and pre-harvest intervals differ by country and change over time. Always read the label, wear protective gear, use the correct dose, observe the waiting period before harvest, protect bees, and confirm with your local agriculture officer.

Harvest & yield

  • First picking comes 60–70 days after transplanting, then every 3–5 days over several weeks.
  • Pick at the breaker / pink stage for distant markets and fully red for nearby sale or processing.
  • Harvest in the cool hours, twist fruit off gently, and avoid bruising.
  • Typical yield: open-pollinated 25–40 t/ha; good hybrids 60–100 t/ha under proper management.

Post-harvest handling

  • Grade by size, colour and soundness; discard cracked or diseased fruit.
  • Pack in ventilated crates, not overfilled, to avoid crushing.
  • Keep out of direct sun; cool soon after harvest to extend shelf life.
  • Store ripe fruit around 10–13 °C — colder than this causes chilling injury and poor flavour.

Field tips that pay off

  • Stake and prune indeterminate types — cleaner, bigger fruit and far fewer rots than letting plants sprawl.
  • Drip + mulch is the single best upgrade: more even moisture, less disease, less weeding, better fruit.
  • Scout weekly and act early — a sticky trap and a torn-off infected leaf often beat a late spray.
  • Don't over-fertilise nitrogen — lush plants set less fruit and attract more pests.