>>1042304Not that I'm aware. Don't put them in water. Put them where you want them permanently planted. Shade them for up to 2 weeks and keep them well watered. Remove flowers until they are about 8 inches high or have grown an additional 8 inches high. Shading is the most important thing. Otherwise, they will look like cooked spaghetti in the sun.
Here's what my first cuttings look like. One has suckers on it large enough to make more cuttings and has a few trusses of tomatoes developing. Some were 6 inches long cuttings and some were 18 inches long cuttings. I just buried the entire stem as much as possible so only about 2-4 inches of the top was above the ground. I just finished mulching with some old straw bales.
I just planted 16 more last night, bringing my total to near 100 tomato plants. I'll probably do more tomorrow if I have enough stuff to shade them with and enough of the right cultivar.