16,949 Garden Web Discussions | Growing Tomatoes

JD's Early black came in earliest at 54 days, and made lots of small (4-6 oz) sweet Black/Red beefsteaks till it shut down in July. Replanted for the fall season and picked my first fall tomato on Tuesday.
Plainsman was new to me this year, I hoped to replace Sioux with a Texas tomato. Three plants made a few tomatoes each and all three died before any of them ripened. Meanwhile Sioux did great, as usual. Will try again one more time but maybe not right away.
Big Dwarf was fair sized and good tasting, but less productive than I had hoped. It will go in a better spot next year.
Cherokee Purple was good despite being uprooted in the garden by a deer, and re-planted late in a too small container to get it out of harms way. It still managed to ripen a few great tasting tomatoes before the heat shut it down.
I grew Tycoon for disease resistance and hybrid vigor and had healthy plants that made a ton of fruit that was not very good to eat at all. They went from green to nearly white as they began to slowly ripen and cook in the sun, after they finally blushed pink it took about two to three weeks for them to turn red, some sat on the counter for several more weeks, but they still never really seemed ripe.
I would still like to find a hybrid red beefsteak for disease resistance and vigor but first it needs to be one that you would want to eat. I'm thinking of trying Big Beef next year and hoping to hear some suggestions.
I am currently enjoying the process of whittling down a long list of new tomatoes to try next year.
I'm also looking for an indeterminate dwarf cherry that tastes great for a container on the deck, and as always, for tomatoes with a Texas heritage to add to my already too long list.
Mike

I'm trying to get a stable OP out of my favourite hybrid, so the majority of my plants this year were the F3 of those. My goal is a 9-ounce(ish), heart-shaped tomato with a complex flavour and enough zing to make your tongue tingly. So far I've just been selecting my best-tasting fruits, but next year I may try a purposeful cross. A few showed up that were really fleshy (like a beefsteak), had great texture, very small locules and good flavour. If I can get that quality crossed with the other, zippier fruits, that'd be great (but I won't sacrifice flavour for the trait). I got a lot of plants/fruits that are on target, so I'm really pleased so far. I also had two friends call me up specifically to gush about the tomatoes (I had given them my extra starts in the spring). That's never happened before! :) As an added bonus, practically all the fruit were able to ripen on the plants outdoors before mid-September - a benefit for our very short season. I've only got a couple of dozen in the house yet ripening up in boxes (we had to get them out of the garden because I was rotating the garlic to that spot, which needed to be planted now).
I also grew Juliet for the kids. They love them (so does hubby), but I don't because the skins are always tough and they're far too sweet.
Lemon Boy was also for the kids; again, too sweet for me. The plant absolutely exploded with so much fruit, though, that the family couldn't keep up, so I've been incorporating a few here and there in sauces. I've still got loads of green fruit on that plant yet. If a person likes sweet yellows, that's certainly a nice one!
San Marzano did well, but I wasn't able to keep up with tying the indeterminates this year. I will grow these again, just to evaluate them when they're properly cared for. They did not to badly considering they were pretty much ignored, though.
Polish Linguisa I want to try again, too. The fruit was lovely, but the plants were pretty wimpy. Perhaps they're just that way or perhaps it was because of the neglect on my part. I want to have a re-try on those.
Roma VF wasn't really worthwhile. The fruit weren't that much larger than Juliet and the flavour wasn't anything special. I'd rather grow the other pastes.
Black Krim finally produced for me this year, but I had to start it much earlier than all the others. It was nice, but had nothing of the "smokey" flavour I always see in its catalogue descriptions. I likely won't grow again.



this fall I would take a soil test and send it to the lab asking for recomendation for a vegitable garden. Also tell them how many square feet of garden you have. Follow there recomendation as what your soil needs.
You might want to contact your state extension agent for advices. Most states offer free soil test as well.
Tim

I think I might have to be on safe side and do cover bags for next year as I grow many varieties at my community garden and we are surrounded by gazillions of other gardeners tomato plants so no saying what is going on. Regarding Garden Peach, I did get different plant from my friendôs saved seed which produced non fuzzy golf ball sized bicolor, nice and tart in taste. I saved those seeds too. T&M Black Russian seed packet produced at least 3 different varieties of the plant, one of them does resemble original picture.

Garden Peach has several subset species being sold under that name by several different vendors. Different sizes, different variations in coloring, although they are all "yellowish" bicolors, and less or more 'fuzz'. It is a good example of the contamination of a variety mentioned above.. Add traders to the mix and the variety purity % falls even more.
And when growing in a community garden - so different from the average home garden - where intensive cropping and cross-wind layouts are common, bagging would be the best bet.
T&M Black Russian seed packet produced at least 3 different varieties of the plant, one of them does resemble original picture.
But do keep in mind that vendors have problems with cross-packet seed contamination. In other words it isn't necessarily cross-pollinated seed but different seeds accidentally included in the same packet. Needless to say some vendors have better controls than others.
Dave


Ellen, I did get your e-mail and will et back to ou when can.
Right now I have several people to get back to, so am behind on e-mails. Then theree's other stuff to deal with here at home like water spouting all over the place in the basement, and with my walker I can't get down there, so I'm glad the Orkin man saw it when he was down there placing mouse traps( smile)
That's just one situation of many that's happening and it makes life interesting.LOL
Thanks in advance for understanding,
Carolyn


My tomatoes are worn out. The ones producing are making smaller tomatoes. Bugs and rain and drought and heat have taken a toll. The only thing still going like mad is Matt's Wild Cherry - foliage is pretty little tomatoes are bright red. I predict I will have millions of them next year.
Here is a link that might be useful: investigate and plug in your city

Carolyn - do you mean the Southern Exposure Seed Exchange or School of Earth, Society and the Environment ? Thanks for this info - and thanks too for the info from fcivish - all extremely helpful. I have heard of sweat bees and have seen the tiny things....I'm positive this mess I have is hornets (although I still haven't had time to study the difference between those and wasps - maybe the same animal?) - I haven't seen a bumblebee since I left Illinois - used to have a lot of those there. Never been stung by one and I don't even know if they sting - I have so much to learn. So thanks again.
Westy

I mean Southern Exposure Seed Exchange.
Jeff McCormak was the person who started it but sold it a few years ago. I know Jeff very well and if you were to look at the tomato and pepper offerings I think you'd see that quite a few were from me.
I've linked to the article below so you don't have to go looking for it. There's a wealth of information in that article for anyone interested
Carolyn,
Here is a link that might be useful: SESE article


By ignoring him, you won't do much to prevent hornworm problems this. year. But it is already pretty late this year. However, by ignoring him, two things happen. First, since he is parasitized, he will NOT produce offspring to infect your tomatoes next year. Second, you will be producing MORE parasitic wasps in your area for NEXT year, and each parasitic wasp will be available to lay eggs and parasitize a lot MORE hornworms in the future. Hopefully catching all the hornworms early and preventing future cycles of hornworm infestation.

I had ten plants this summer and had the best luck yet with CP and Indian Stripe....several were one pound or a little bigger. I have a clay 40x40 but grew these in a 8x12 spot of looser soil with bagged manure, topsoil and granular 6-12-12. My neigbor loved them and his daughter who is a missioary saved some seed to take back to Africa. These are coming to the top of my favorites list in a hurry. First clusters sometimes had six tomatoes in one spot. They did blight early but so did all the other 60 plants in the big garden. Too much rain I suppose.

I'm really limited on space in my garden...
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Welcome to the club. You are not alone.
-- try to plann some DWARFS(mabe in pots),
-- Try to plant some determinants.
-- Try to plant in tighter space BUT be ready to do some systematic pruning.
If you do the above combination , you probably can grow TWICE as many plants as regular/standard/conventional inDETERMINANT plants in any given space.
I plant (in average ) one plant in 3 sqr-ft. 4 sqr-ft per inDET plant is just fine. But as I said you have to control them. Right now I have one of ecah : Early Girl, Black Krim and Brandywine in a a 12 sqr-ft bed. And believe me they are HUGE.

Seysonn, my real estate is limited not as much as yours, I do like your strategy though! I have few dwarf and super early det.- not that I like det. but they have their use- and indet. for earilness. I find that I am super happy to have cherry early on but as season progresses I want to have that good heart or beefy slicer far more and cherries are just not the thing anymore. Going to be first time trying real dwarfs that could be grown in 4ôèpot too...

Well it is awfully late in the tomato growing season in your zone to expect much blooming. Any fruit wouldn't have time to develop and ripen anyway.
But if this has been an issue all season long then the most likely cause is excessive nitrogen fertilizers. Excess N causes big beautiful healthy looking plants with lots of branches and leaves but few blooms and even fewer fruit.
So the first question would be what have you been feeding them and how often?
Dave


Thanks for the info so are you saying to make solid rows of a variety?? Or can I do 25 ft of BK and 25ft CP?? My rows will be running east to west . So I should plant the CP and BK furthest south due to the fact the sun is predominantly south of my garden the majority of the year and never really gets to be directly over head. Like puting short people in the front and tall in the back when you take a picture the sun being the camera.. Anyhow for seed saving purposes I have two plots could I split them up to help with cross pollination issues or if I want to save seed I should keep clusters of blooms protected from insects?? My plots are as follows the big one is 20x50ft and the small is 25x30ft they are split by my back lawn about 20X20 thanks for any info regarding my questions

Or can I do 25 ft of BK and 25ft CP?? Like puting short people in the front and tall in the back when you take a picture the sun being the camera.
Sure you can. Just don't intermix the plants. Like a photo? Exactly.
Crossing isn't insects so much as wind so note your prevailing wind direction. But even with plants planted right next to each other the crossing is minimal.
Your BK, Brandy Pink, and CP is likely the only ones you'd want to save seeds from anyway. Mr. Stripey and Brandy red have several sub-strains that may or may not breed true and there is no telling which one Burpee is selling.
Dave


Hey all,
Posting this on behalf of Mom :)
For my fellow gardeners: Hubby and I just did our own Myth Busting. He gave me a 22" blacklight for my birthday (romantic que no?) because I read that tomato hornworms glow... didn't really believe it but
I had to give it a try. We are here to tell you IT WORKS!!!! Very very cool!
Has anyone seen the flies that lay eggs on the hornworm. I felt so sorry for the worm that I squashed it but I have been encouraging those flies every since. There are u-tube videos that show exactly what I saw. The fly looks like an ordinary big fly or did until I figured out which ones attack the hornworms.
Here is a link that might be useful: trachnid fly