Tomato crop at Wailupe Farms
Vegetable Guide

Growing Tomatoes in a Screenhouse in Hawaii

Wailupe Farms Waimanalo, Oahu Updated 2026
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Ask any experienced farmer in Hawaii and they'll tell you the same thing: growing tomatoes in the open field here is a losing battle. Whiteflies, sooty mold, and fungal disease will beat you every time. At Wailupe Farms, we only grow tomatoes under a screenhouse — and here's everything we've learned about making it work.

In This Guide

  1. Quick Facts
  2. Why Screenhouse Only in Hawaii
  3. Variety Selection
  4. Screenhouse Setup
  5. Planting & Spacing
  6. Trellising & Pruning
  7. Watering & Feeding
  8. Pollination
  9. Pests & Disease
  10. Harvest

Quick Facts

Structure
Screenhouse required
Season
Year-round in Hawaii
Days to Harvest
60–85 days
Type
Indeterminate preferred
Spacing
24–36 inches
Biggest Threat
Silverleaf whitefly

Why Screenhouse Only in Hawaii

Hawaii has three major strikes against open-field tomatoes that make protected growing essentially mandatory for consistent production:

1. Silverleaf Whitefly (Bemisia argentifolii)

This is the big one. The silverleaf whitefly is the primary pest vector for tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) and other devastating tomato viruses. Whitefly populations in Hawaii are enormous, year-round, and resistant to many conventional pesticides. In the open field, a tomato crop can be wiped out within weeks. A properly screened house with 50-mesh or finer screen blocks the whiteflies entirely.

2. Fungal Disease from Rain and Humidity

Hawaii's constant humidity and frequent rain — especially on the windward side — creates perfect conditions for early blight, late blight, and powdery mildew. A screenhouse dramatically reduces foliar wetting, controls humidity to some degree, and keeps soil splash (a major disease vector) off lower leaves.

3. Wind and Rain Damage

Trade winds and seasonal storms batter open-field tomatoes. A screenhouse gives physical protection, letting you stake vertically without the vines getting shredded.

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Don't try to cut corners We've seen farmers try 20-mesh screen to "let in more airflow" — whiteflies get through. Use 50-mesh minimum. The airflow reduction is manageable; a whitefly infestation is not.

Variety Selection

Not all tomato varieties handle Hawaii's heat and humidity equally. Focus on varieties bred for tropical or subtropical conditions with known disease resistance.

Proven Performers in Hawaii

What to Avoid

Heirloom varieties with no disease resistance (Brandywine, Cherokee Purple, etc.) will disappoint in Hawaii's conditions. Save those for cooler, drier environments — or very controlled screenhouse conditions with aggressive IPM. For commercial production, stick with proven hybrids.

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Look for TYLCV resistance As tomato yellow leaf curl virus becomes more prevalent, look for new varieties with TYLCV resistance in the label. This is increasingly available in commercial hybrids.

Screenhouse Setup

The screenhouse is your biggest investment and your most important tool. Get it right and everything downstream is easier.

Planting & Spacing

Starting Transplants

Start seeds in trays outside the screenhouse (or in a separate nursery area). Harden off transplants before moving them in. Transplant into the screenhouse when seedlings are 4–6 inches tall with 2–3 true leaves — typically 3–4 weeks from germination.

Spacing

For vertically trained indeterminate varieties: 24–36 inches in-row, 48–60 inches between rows. This seems generous but airflow between plants is critical for disease prevention inside an enclosed structure. Crowded plants = disease.

Succession Planting

One of the big advantages of screenhouse production in Hawaii is year-round growing. Plant a new batch every 8–10 weeks to maintain continuous harvest. Stagger planting so you always have plants at different stages.

Trellising & Pruning

Indeterminate tomatoes in a screenhouse are trained vertically — this maximizes space, improves airflow, and makes pest management much easier than sprawling plants.

Florida Weave or Single-Stem Training

We use overhead wire systems with twine dropped down to each plant. As the plant grows, wind the twine around the stem every 6–8 inches, or use tomato clips. Remove all suckers below the first flower cluster — single-stem or two-stem training works best in tight screenhouse spacing.

Leaf Pruning

Remove lower leaves as the plant grows — any leaf that's shaded or touching the ground is a disease entry point. Aim to maintain the bottom 12–18 inches of stem completely bare as the plant matures.

Watering & Feeding

Drip irrigation is the gold standard for screenhouse tomatoes. It keeps water off foliage (reducing disease), delivers moisture consistently at the root zone, and can be set on timers to eliminate the labor of daily hand watering.

Feeding Schedule

Calcium deficiency (causing blossom end rot) is common in fast-growing screenhouse tomatoes. Foliar calcium spray every 2 weeks during fruiting prevents it. Consistent soil moisture also reduces the plant's calcium uptake issues.

Pollination

This catches many first-time screenhouse growers off guard. Tomatoes are self-pollinating but rely on vibration (from wind or bees) to release pollen. Inside a sealed screenhouse, there's no wind and — importantly — no bees.

Manual Pollination Methods

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Pollinate in the morning Tomato pollen is most viable in mid-morning (9–11 AM) when humidity is lower and flowers are fully open. Make manual pollination part of your morning routine.

Pests & Disease Inside the Screenhouse

A well-sealed screenhouse dramatically reduces pest pressure — but doesn't eliminate it. Be vigilant from day one.

Whiteflies

If you see whiteflies inside, find and seal the entry point immediately. Yellow sticky traps placed throughout the screenhouse act as early warning systems and help control small populations. If whiteflies establish inside, biological control with Encarsia formosa (a parasitic wasp) is effective and doesn't require chemical intervention.

Tomato Hornworm

These can sneak in as moths and lay eggs. Check undersides of leaves regularly. Hand-pick caterpillars. Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) spray is highly effective and safe.

Spider Mites

More common inside enclosed structures, especially during hot dry spells. Look for fine webbing and stippled leaves. Predatory mites (Phytoseiulus persimilis) are an excellent biocontrol option. Avoid broad-spectrum pesticides that kill the predators.

Early Blight & Powdery Mildew

Even inside a screenhouse, humidity can cause fungal issues. Lower planting density, remove diseased leaves immediately, and ensure airflow. Copper-based fungicides and neem oil are effective preventive sprays.

Harvest

Pick tomatoes when they're fully colored but still firm — they'll continue to ripen off the vine. In Hawaii's heat, tomatoes left on the vine too long soften quickly. Harvest every 2–3 days once production starts.

Store at room temperature, never in the refrigerator — cold kills tomato flavor. Countertop or a cool shaded area is ideal. For restaurant or market sales, harvest slightly underripe for longer shelf life.

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Tomatoes from Wailupe Farms Vine-ripened, screenhouse grown in Waimanalo. Available seasonally for local pickup and farmers markets. Get in touch to check availability.