I'm having a decent tomato crop this year as well. I repeated last years experiment. I have long had a "tomato house" which is a tall cold frame covered with greenhouse grade clear plastic. After "cooking" my tomato plants a couple years ago during a hot spell, I redid the roof so that I can lift and tilt it open during the warmest months. That seems to help, but I'm not sure it's enough. Only two of the four plants in there have grown and produced very well at all, one Sungold and one Early Girl. I think I need to make the door removable so that it can be changed out for a screen door to keep deer out. Then I planted three plants in my raised bed area, another Sungold and a new one for me, Big Beef, and a Juane Flame. They got off to a slow start because the weather was a bit cool, but once they got going it's been tall plants with lots of tomatoes. I added a visqueen tent over those plants in hopes they survive heavy rains and light frosts. So far, so good; we cant' eat them fast enough. I think next year I'll just plant Sun Gold (for salads) and Big Beef (for slicing).
I got an excellent crop of green beans and carrots, but onions look to be a bust again this year. I don't know what I'm doing wrong - I start some in a tray inside on a window sill and sow some directly into the raised bed. But they (Walla Walla) are basically the size of green onions. And something that should be dead easy, I had really mixed success growing lettuce. The seeds are from Territorial, but maybe I need to try different varieties.
Another mixed success are my blueberries. I bought one new plant this spring and put it in a large container, and it did quite well for its size this year. Of my two old plants (10 or 11 years old) either need to be tossed to the compost heap or replanted. They are in containers, large ones. But maybe they have become root bound. One no longer turns bright green and produces very few berries after being the super producer for years. The other has nice green leaves and produces a huge number of berries. However, after the first few ripen, the remainder sit there in a half ripe condition and never finish ripening. I left them all summer, and they finally dropped off the plant in a still half-ripe condition. No clue what's going wrong there.
Then there's my Honeycrisp apple tree. This started out as one of those $14 bare root Costco impulse purchases a few years ago. Last year it produced a huge crop, but this year I only got 13 apples off of it. It blossomed really well, but maybe the bees didn't do their pollenating job - beats me.
Anyway, I got a long way to go to become a green thumb gardener, but I've graduated from the totally black thumb type of gardener.