
In recent years, heirloom tomatoes have been in vogue. Unfortunately some of these varieties require a relatively large number of days to harvest. Examples are Purple Cherokee (85), Yellow Brandywine (90) ["potato leafed" variety photo below left] and Beefstake (85 days).

Tomatoes require warm night temperatures for growth. Night temperatures below 55 degrees F tend to slow and shut down growth. Depending how cold the nights, growth may take days to resume. This loses you valuable time in the race to tally growing days for maturity.
The high and dry environment of Colorado’s Front Range creates a summer climate that has warm days (80 or 90 degrees F) and thirty degree cooler nights due to radiational cooling (50 or 60 degrees F). Summers are very comfortable for people but not as conducive to growing heat-loving crops like tomatoes that prefer the warm nights of the Midwest and Eastern U.S. where the humidity prevents heat loss at night.

The other factor that decreases yield of tomato fruit is the arrangement of the flower. Varieties that do well here tend to have reproductive parts tucked well into the staminate cone in the middle of the flower. When reproductive parts protrude to or beyond the cone opening, they dry in our low humidity and wither before they pollinate. Tomatoes bred in New Jersey, Florida and other places in the East often don’t yield well here for this reason.
Modern tomato varieties tend to require a smaller number of days to harvest. Many cherry types are 50 to 60. ‘Early Girl’ and derivations are in the low 60’s. ‘Celebrity’ is 70. The ‘Boy’ types are in the low 70’s. My advice is to choose a variety requiring 80 or fewer days to harvest.
Next post, microclimate location and tomato success.
Tomato photos credit: Carl Wilson