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Just made a cold frame to move some tomato seedlings too, is my angle too big?
So I managed to scavenge a couple of old windows and have turned the first one into a cold frame. From my research the angle recommended was 30 degrees for the slant of the window however on all the cold frames I see online and on youtube the angle seems to be a lot lower. Have I done something wrong here? The angle is definitely 30 degrees that I have made it. The hight really works for me though as I am going to put some tomato seedlings in to start hardening off.


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The angle maximises the light, which is the important thing for your young plants.
Just be aware that it's still very early for tomato plants, so don't be in a hurry to move them out there.
I only start sowing mine at this time of year
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
When the time is right it'll be fine for your tomatoes, but don't put them in there until it's a LOT warmer - around May/June time if the weather is OK - assuming you're in the UK.
Tomatoes don't like temperatures below 13C at any time of their lives
Billericay - Essex
Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit.
Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.
When you pot on your tomatoes you can bury them deeper in their pots - up to their lower leaves - and they will produce more roots from the stems making them stronger.
I also used to get going with the toms too early and would end up with a similar situation, The problem is the plants end up very leggy so you don't get many trusses on each plant and the stems can't take the weight of the fruit.
I sow mine in a heated propagator the 1st week of March and I start picking late June onward.
Not sure what your best plan is, but they need to be kept reasonably warm with as much light as possible
Billericay - Essex
Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit.
Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.
You might have to put them in a polytunnel, and use fleece at night or the heater. They need light, but they also need enough warmth for a long while yet.
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
You also need to ventilate during the day, especially if it's warm. Fluctuating temps are a bigger problem for things like tomatoes than almost anything.
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...