Historical background information for varieties handed down from bygone days.
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July 22, 2010 | #1 |
Tomatoville® Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Hendersonville, NC zone 7
Posts: 10,385
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Final one for awhile, but a good contrast - 1897 Salzer tomatoes
My latest score is an incredibly fragile 1897 Salzer - they used much thinner paper than some of the other companies.
Red tomatoes: (23 types) Salzer's Fifty Day Salzer's Earliest of All Salzer's First Prize Salzer's Morning Star (described as very large fruited) Paragon Volunteer Early Mayflower Trophy Cardinal Hundred Day Lorillard Atlantic Prize Favorite Conquerer General Grant Perfect Gem Salzer's New Pot Tomato Red Currant Stone Aristocrat Crimson Cushion Royal Red Red Granite Pink tomatoes: (9 types) Salzer's New Improved Peach LaCrosse Seedling (sounds like a large fruited dwarf variety) Salzer's Ferris Wheel (I think that 1894 is the introduction date for this) Acme Beauty Turner's Hybrid Mikado (strange they list both - supposed to be essentially the same tomato) Buckeye State Fordhook First Yellow/orange tomatoes: (3 types) California Fig Tomato Golden Glory Yellow Pear No color indicated: (1 type) Salzer's Giant Tree tomato (my suspicion - pink and potato leaf) So, 36 different tomatoes in 1897. We found Golden Glory in the USDA collection, as well as Ferris Wheel. A few other interesting ones, like La Crosse seedling and Morning Star, seem gone for good.
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Craig |
July 22, 2010 | #2 |
Tomatopalooza™ Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: NC-Zone 7
Posts: 2,188
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Stone was in all three of your recent catalog listings. I still
think it's a very nice tomato that is not grown enough. And Ferris Wheel.... Yummm...
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Intelligence is knowing a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is knowing not to put one in a fruit salad. Cuostralee - The best thing on sliced bread. |
July 23, 2010 | #3 |
Tomatoville® Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: San Antonio, Texas
Posts: 4,386
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Like to get my hands on the new pot tomato variety! Any description in the catalog?
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Michael |
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