Plant them in the ground, outside, when the ground temperature reaches a consistent 65 degrees. Anything less may stunt the plant. Peppers may need even it even warmer.
Note that by "ground temperature" we mean literally the temperature of the dirt, which is why container and raised bed tomatoes will grow much faster, much earlier in the year; the dirt warms up sooner.
You can start them from seeds, indoors, up to eight weeks before planting them in the ground, depending on the conditions you use...larger containers allow you to start them earlier.
If you're starting tomato plants from seed, start them indoors under strong lights in a warm room 6 weeks before the last frost date for your area. You can find out the last frost date by contacting your county or regional agricultural extension office, or googling "last frost date" + (your)location.
Frost kills tomatoes, and they grow very slowly in cold, but not frosty, weather, so it's best to plant them in the ground only after all danger of frost has passed. This can be early March in some locations, or as late as mid-june in others.
Tomatoes should be planted after all chances of frost are gone for your area. Your local extension agent would have the dates for your area.
You can plant the seeds in containers inside the house in January. By April or May you will have nice sized plants to transplant into your garden.
You should wait to plant your tomatoes until the last spring frost has past. However you can get a jump start by using a plant protector like the Season Starter. It will allow you to start your plants in the garden up to two months early.
It is best to plant tomatoes when all danger of frost in your area is past. Either plant starts from your local garden shop or start seeds six weeks prior to last frost inside. As you set either out, harden them off by introducing them to the outside conditions a little at a time. If you have them planted and a surprise frost is coming, protect them by watering them and covering them with a plastic milk carton with one end cut away.
May the 3rd is generally considered your last frost date. So you can plant your tomato plants anytime after that.
Early May is usually best
The word 'plant' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'plant' is a word for a living organism; a word for a place where an industrial or manufacturing process takes place; a word for a thing.Examples:"That is a pretty green plant," (noun)"Is it time to plant tomatoes?" (verb)
Play the game lots.... The plant that gets you the most XP at a time are grapes... For coins it's tomatoes.
Tomatoes are picked and boxed in the fields or put on big trucks and taken to the processing plant a few miles away and turned into sauce or paste. Most tomatoes box in the fields are on the green side so when they arrive to the shipping port to go to stores they will ripen by the time they are sent to the stores.
check with your county extension office or local master gardener group for your frost free date. Plant your tomatoes any time after the frost free date.
Mississippi is in the Central Time Zone (CST)
Yea you can raise tomatoes in a pot in the house in the winter time.
High temperatures is the flower killer for tomato plants. If you live in the south where temperatures hover in 90's for any extend length of time, you will want to plant a tomato plant that is breed for high heat.
Determinant tomatoes are ones that produce tomatoes for a very short time. This is in contrast to indeterminate tomatoes, which produce tomatoes over a long period of time. It is not to say that determinant tomatoes do not produce a large crop, only that whatever crop they produce is produced pretty much all at once.
They are picked in the field and sent to a tomato processing plant. At the plant they are steamed, crushed, or chopped depending on if they are going to become paste, sauce or left whole or canned.
It is actually Joliet and Marquette... (get it right the first time Wiki)
you pick plants at the right time