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this post was submitted on 08 Jun 2026
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Gardening
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They look healthy to me, looking at the new growth. Your transplant shock theory holds up. One thing you said did stand out. 4 hours is barely enough sun. Make it 6 and the plant will do twice as well, in my experience, the more the better.
Wait, aren't you supposed to reduce sun after transplanting to give the plant time to adjust while stressed? (I'm learning how to take care of plants, I don't really know what I'm doing yet lol)
Generally true but tomatoes are like "scorch me daddy"
Laughing in Arizona with a shade cloth over my tomatoes as the afternoon June sun blasts them into a curly leafed mass.
"THE SUN IS A DEADLY LASER!"
(My older leaves also brown up on the tips fairly quickly. The 15-25% Humidity and low night temps help keep them alive in summer, but the leaves have a rough time in the sun and dry heat)
I overstated that for sure. Here in Ga, the trees almost always limit the sun to 8-9 hours. That said though I wonder if your problem is more heat than sun. I've literally never had an issue with too much sun on a tomato, 15 years of growing them.
Ah, gotcha. Thank you, I'll keep that in mind if I try tomatoes again! It was one of the first plants my friend gifted me to try taking care of (cause she had one extra) and it did okay until it fell off a ledge cause I don't have a great place to put big plants so they can get a lot of sun lol
Yeah, I knew this would be an issue, problem is I'm on the northwest side of a duplex, and the short stretch of southwest-facing facade that I have are my driveway and garage. Only about six feet of my mulch bed wraps around to that southwest side (and it's already occupied by other plants), so for now, all my veggies are on my (northeast-facing) deck, but since they're all in containers, I might repurpose that little stretch of southwest-facing mulch bed, and I could potentially line my driveway with containers. The other caveat is that my driveway is slightly sloped, so... definitely not ideal. It just so happens that all the veggies I'd want to grow (tomatoes, peppers, cukes) love sun, and my physical environment is oriented the wrong way to maximize daily sunlight.