The Cold Soil Problem Destroying Your Tomato Harvest Right Now

Your tomatoes look strong — thick stems, dark green leaves — but flowers keep dropping. You water. You feed. Nothing helps. This video explains the tomato plant problems happening in June and why more fertilizer usually makes it worse. If you're seeing tomato blossom drop or tomato flowers dropping on a healthy plant, the real cause is usually a nitrogen imbalance in cold soil — not a lack of feeding. Many gardeners mistake nitrogen deficiency symptoms for something else entirely — this video shows you how to tell them apart. You'll learn how cold soil blocks phosphorus uptake, why nitrogen keeps running while everything else stalls, how to read your tomato leaves curling to spot the difference between overwatering tomatoes and nitrogen overload, and the exact steps to help the plant recover and hold its next clusters. If you're growing tomatoes and losing flowers right now — watch this before adding anything else to the soil. 0:00 Why Your Tomatoes Drop Flowers in June 1:31 The Soil Temperature Problem Nobody Checks 2:47 How Cold Soil Blocks Phosphorus Uptake 3:35 Why Nitrogen Makes It Worse 4:18 What's Really Happening Underground 4:54 How to Read Your Leaf Curl (3 Types) 6:01 Why Lower Leaves Yellow While Stem Thickens 6:34 The 3-Week Window You Can't Afford to Miss 7:25 The Fix: Watering, Leaves, and Soil Crust 9:24 Do Less — This Is What Recovery Looks Like 10:10 How to Know Your Plant Is Recovering #TomatoGrowing #TomatoProblems #VegetableGardening #GardeningTips #TomatoPlant #HomeGarden #GrowYourOwn #TomatoCare #GardeningForBeginners #OrganicGardening