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Name:   Mack - Email Member
Subject:   Hey, LNG>> Tomato Inquiry?
Date:   3/14/2011 8:00:45 PM

I know you love your Tomato crop each year and results are obvious. Lots of folks around also grow tomatoes; see the vines during afternoon cruises. But, you go further by growing your plants from seed. Why, and How? (If you care to share)
Which tomato is your favorite? and why (texture/seeds/pulp/flavor/skin/disease resistance).
I have ordered seed before, and potted with gro-lites etc, etc. Pain in the buttock vs. buying from nursery, with no better results.
Interested in your process. Maybe others too?
Mack



Name:   willallie - Email Member
Subject:   Hey, LNG>> Tomato Inquiry?
Date:   3/14/2011 8:43:55 PM

Consider me interested. I just wish we could find a tomato that would start out great in the Spring and after July 4 and heat, with no watering, would still produce home-grown 'maters. My husband's grandfather could do this, but not me. Could be I'm not quite dedicated.



Name:   lakngulf - Email Member
Subject:   Hey, LNG>> Tomato Inquiry?
Date:   3/14/2011 8:57:19 PM (updated 3/14/2011 9:12:09 PM)

I like pain, I guess.  You asked for it so here goes.

I bought all tomato plants from nursery up until three or four years ago.  My son and daughter-in-law gave me some seed that were supposed to represent the gardens of Thomas Jefferson (daughter-in-law was comptroller at the TJ house while my son was in law school at UVA).  I planted all the seed and was surprised at the results.  Among the seeds were some white eggplant and some brandywine tomatoes, which both did great and the tomatoes were some of the best I had ever had.  So after that I decided to start more plants from seed and things just grew from there.

 

For couple of years I started indoors under grow lights, then transfer to 5 inch peat pots.  These were put outside when the weather was pretty and brought inside when storms or cold was on the way (the pain).  When the weather was right (and even before) I transplant to garden, and hope. 

 

I got tired of taking the plants out and bringing them in, and they do not go well with my wife’s décor in the family room.  So, last fall I began a lean to extension on my old shed with the hopes of adding a greenhouse.  Things were going well in September until  (insert fall from ladder and broken leg here).  Well, finally I got back to it in time to put the five inch peat pots in the greenhouse, but still have the grow light and grow shelves inside house.  Hopefully the whole process goes to the greenhouse next year.  Also, I actually have some plants in some soil in the greenhouse with the hopes of a super-early crop.  The tomatoes I like the best are Celebrity—great tasting and pretty much produce at one time for freezing,  Better Boy—a little larger, great taste, and are supposed to last longer (the determinate, indeterminate thing that I can never figure out), and the TJ Brandywine—huge, meaty tomato with almost no core.  I have tried other kinds of Brandywine, but TJ knew best.  I also start peppers, egg plant, cukes, squash, beans, okra.  They just start so well in the miracle gro soil.

 

I like the idea that I saw each plant in the garden grow from that little seed.  The gain from the pain.





Name:   roswellric - Email Member
Subject:   Tomato Answers....
Date:   3/14/2011 9:49:17 PM

I used to plant at least 13 heirloom varieties. My favorite was Cherokee Purple. The workhorse was Celebrity. Others were Mortgage Lifter, German Giant, Brandywine, Homestead and others. The selection is mind boggling and fun. You should plant several different heirlooms at one time since in any given season because some will fail. These tomatos were developed over decades for taste, disease resistance and quality but not shipping. The seeds of heirlooms are not hybrids and will reproduce true if you are a seed saver. Most all of these are Indeterminate and will give you a long yield. I started mine in late January under lights in "peat pellets" in a tray. The best source of seed is Tomato Growers Supply. You can trust the seed's integrity. I would try some this year although you will be a little late just to get some experience with growing from seed. It's lots of fun and challenging.

URL: Tomato Growers Supply

Name:   BigFoot - Email Member
Subject:   Hey, LNG>> Tomato Inquiry?
Date:   3/14/2011 10:06:08 PM

..just got my dollar's worth out of those reading glasses from Dollar Tree...



Name:   BigFoot - Email Member
Subject:   Tomato Answers....
Date:   3/14/2011 10:13:08 PM

..are ya'll sure you're not just making up tomato names?..."Mortgage Lifter", "TJ Brandywine", "German Giant"....hmmmm...sounds a little fishy...



Name:   lakngulf - Email Member
Subject:   Tomato Answers....
Date:   3/14/2011 11:53:42 PM

Watch out Bigfoot.  Rude will make a song of this before you know it.  Hmmmm, now the cause of the fall is coming back to me.  Could it have been that TJ Brandywine chased with a German Giant?




Name:   BigFoot - Email Member
Subject:   Tomato Answers....
Date:   3/15/2011 12:17:09 AM

Yep...I believe that right there would get you goin'.....



Name:   muddauber - Email Member
Subject:   Hey, LNG>> Tomato Inquiry?
Date:   3/15/2011 9:38:50 AM

I used to plant a considerable garden each year. Problems with lake pump/underground lines took its toll. Got that fixed.  Then the deer.  Final straw was when the deer ate all my plants to the ground.  Ok, will do some fall tomatoes.  Got a flat of plants Fri eve. Put em on the deck.  Early Sat, went out and prepped the beds.  Went to get the plants, they were all eaten.  Just got tired of planting/nuturing appetizers for the deer. Mimms [Pug's Place] is just around the corner from me, get my maters from there.  Asparagus still grows fine, and deer leave them alone. Figs, that's another matter.



Name:   roswellric - Email Member
Subject:   Tomato Answers....
Date:   3/15/2011 9:48:40 AM

You should hear what we call 'em in private :-)



Name:   lakngulf - Email Member
Subject:   Hey, LNG>> Tomato Inquiry?
Date:   3/15/2011 10:19:52 AM


Now I do have a fence around my garden, or else the deer would mow it to the ground.  Still have some trouble with chipmunks and rabbits and squirrels.  Now my wifes herb/flower garden does not have a fence.  The deer enjoy!!



Name:   roswellric - Email Member
Subject:   Hey, LNG>> Tomato Inquiry?
Date:   3/15/2011 10:52:12 AM

LOL!



Name:   Mack - Email Member
Subject:   Thanks LNG
Date:   3/15/2011 11:22:12 AM

Appreciate that. Do you ever plant a second crop? That is, save some space from early Spring planting and maybe a month later put in more plants that will mature later, spread the harvest out some? Even with 5 or 6 plants maturing at the same time, we are swimming in mater's (too lazy to freeze/can).
Also, what fertilizer? 8-8-8/10-10-10, granular/liquid??



Name:   lakngulf - Email Member
Subject:   Thanks LNG
Date:   3/15/2011 11:43:58 AM

Second crop:  Yes, but it takes patience to wait to plant them.  Seems they all want to produce at same time.  Last year was my best late production.  I actually planted late ones behind my house. They were doing great, but no fence and the deer ran out of things to eat in my wife's herb garden and enjoyed some maters and leaves.  The squirrels are worse behind the house as well.  Good .22 practice, however.  I got one last year with a green tomato in his mouth.  Thought about a wall mount.

Freezing:  You should work on that.  In the heat of the season I will peel and chop some maters along with some fresh okra, and cook for a bit, let cool, and freeze.  This is ready for making soup other times of the year, like last weekend. 

Fertlizer: 13-13-13    But I do give the young plants some miracle gro as they are maturing in the peat pots.





Name:   muddauber - Email Member
Subject:   Hey, LNG>> Tomato Inquiry?
Date:   3/15/2011 10:03:26 PM

How'd you ever get to do that?  Round here, her fence would have been up first. 







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