This easy 10-step process will transform you from a beginner to a master organic gardener all while producing a juicy, ripe crop that will be perfect for summer salads and fresh sauces. Follow these steps for your best harvest yet. 

Related: 7 Secrets For A High Yield Vegetable Garden

1. Choose A Bright, Airy Spot

tomatoes
AHMAD FAIZAL YAHYA/Shutterstock

Plant tomatoes—leaving room between plants for air to circulate—where they will get at least 10 hours of light per day during the summer season.

Related: A Tomato Variety Even Brown Thumbs Can Grow

2. Rotate The Crop

The key to keeping a rich vegetable patch is to alternate your tomato bed between a few spots in the garden to diminish the risk of soil-borne diseases such as bacterial spot and early blight.

3. Pass Up Overgrown Transplants

When deciding which tomato varieties grow best, beware of tomato seedlings with lush green starts but poor root systems. They will languish for weeks before growing.

4. Bury The Stems

Plant your tomato seedlings up to the first true leaves. New roots will quickly sprout on the stems and more roots mean more fruits.

5. Water Deeply By Infrequently

Soak your tomato bed once a week, or every five days at the height of summer. Water directly on the soil, not on the leaves.

Related: 90 Pounds Of Tomatoes From 5 Plants

6. Pinch The Runts

Prune off the non-fruiting branches and it will direct the tomato plant's energy into growing bigger, better fruit.

Related: The Simple Secret To Making Your Tomato Plants Grow Healthy And Strong

7. Stake Them High

When growing tomatoes, use 6-foot stakes for indeterminate varieties like Brandywine. Put in the stakes when transplanting to avoid damaging roots.

Related: The Most Reliable Tomato Cages And Trellises

8. Add Compost And Trim

While the first fruit is ripening, encourage new growth and continued fruit by scratching compost around the stem and trimming some of the upper leaves.

preview for Kitchen Hack: Cut 10 Cherry Tomatoes In One Slice

9. Plant Again

Three weeks after you plant tomatoes in your garden, put in another set so all of your harvest doesn't come at once.

Related: Scientists Are Producing Electricity From Rotting Tomatoes!

10. Pick Ripe

Harvest and enjoy your growing tomatoes once they've reached full size and are fully colored.