When to Plant Tomato in Perth — Mediterranean Guide

Tomato

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Tomatoes are Australia's most popular home-grown vegetable and arguably the most rewarding. The difference between a sun-ripened home-grown tomato and a supermarket specimen is profound. They require warmth, consistent moisture, and attention to pest management (especially fruit fly in QLD/NSW). Hundreds of varieties available from cherry to beefsteak, determinate to indeterminate, heirloom to hybrid. Grafted plants offer disease resistance for problem soils.

Current Growing Conditions

Soil temperature: 21.9°C (optimal range: 18–30°C) ✓ Ready to plant

How to Grow Tomato in Mediterranean Australia

When to Plant

September to November. Warm dry summers excellent for tomatoes.

Soil
Well-drained, rich loam with plenty of compost. Deep soil preferred. pH-adjusted with lime if acidic.
pH Range
6.0-6.8
Sunlight
Full sun (minimum 6-8 hours daily). More sun = more fruit = more flavour.
Spacing
60cm apart, 90cm between rows
Watering
Deep watering 2-3 times per week, consistent and at the base. NEVER overhead water - promotes fungal disease. Inconsistent watering is the #1 cause of blossom end rot and fruit splitting. Drip irrigat

Companion plants: Basil, Marigold, Parsley, Carrot, Nasturtium

Avoid planting near: Brassicas, Fennel, Dill (attracts tomato hornworm), Potato (shared diseases)

Mediterranean Growing Tips for Tomato

Recommended Varieties

  • Grosse Lisse
  • Roma
  • San Marzano
  • Black Russian
  • Mortgage Lifter

Key Challenges

  • Fruit fly now established in Adelaide and Perth
  • Dry summer needs consistent irrigation
  • Spider mites

Pro Tips

  • Excellent tomato zone - warm dry conditions reduce fungal disease
  • Start fruit fly management - QFF is expanding in Perth and Adelaide
  • Drip irrigation for consistent moisture

Harvesting Tomato

When ready: Fully coloured (red, pink, yellow depending on variety), slight give when gently squeezed, aromatic. For best flavour, pick vine-ripened. In fruit fly zones, pick at 'breaker' stage (first colour change) and ripen indoors.

How to harvest: Twist and snap or cut with clean secateurs. Harvest in morning when cool. Handle carefully to avoid bruising.

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