Member discussion regarding the methods, varieties and merits of growing tomatoes.
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June 28, 2012 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Hamilton, Texas
Posts: 382
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Experience with these varieties?
I've sort of obsessed with tomatoes. I always have been and, as a result, I'm working on graduate work in tomato breeding. That's also the reason there have been multiple posts like this as I attempt to nail down my list for next year.
That said, I'll always have a spot in my heart for heirloom tomatoes. They've stuck around because, while commercial hybrids can provide you with increased vigor, yield and disease resistance, they can't provide you with the unique colors and incredible taste associated with the heirlooms. The following varieties are the ones I've purchased seed for this fall. There are several reds but I'm growing those for my grandfather. I have to work him from hybrids to heirlooms little by little you see and he's still not sold on tomatoes that aren't red. So, if you have any experience with the following varieties, let me know. I'm limited to 72 spots in my seed tray so I'll be splitting these among those openings. So 1-2 of each variety is probably my limit. Also, I know that no tomato really does that well in the 100+ degree Texas heat but, of these, which have you had the best luck with? Ananas Noire Azoychka Berkeley Tie-Dye Big Rainbow (I have seed left from last year but this one did terrible for me with no fruits) Big Zac Black and Brown Boar Black Truffle Hybrid (From Burpee) Bull's Heart Ceylon Celebrity (Main Crop) Cherokee Purple Costoluto Genovese German Giant Great White Green Giant Heinz 1439 VFA (Main Crop) Hillbilly Jetsetter Kosovo Mexico Mr. Stripey Mule Team Neves Azorean Omar's Lebanese P20 Blue (Purely Novelty) Paul Robeson Persimmon Porterhouse Hybrid Porter's Pride Purple Calabash Riesentraube Royesta Sandul Moldovan Sun Gold Solar Fire Thessaloniki Watermelon Beefsteak Zapotec Also looking at adding: Arbuznyi Indian Stripe JD's Special C-Tex (EXTREMELY intrigued by this one.) |
June 28, 2012 | #2 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: kentucky
Posts: 1,019
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German Giant -am growing this year for first time.
Green Giant = grew it once, did not care for it; don't plan on growing it again. Hillbilly- pretty tomato with very good taste. Neves Azorean - good production, very good flavor. Sun Gold - great taste, very productive, grow every year. |
June 28, 2012 | #3 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Hamilton, Texas
Posts: 382
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June 28, 2012 | #4 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Princeton, Ky Zone 7A
Posts: 2,208
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In ground as we speak is Paul Robeson and Big Zac out of your list.
Paul Robeson which is a (RL) has currently 8 tomatoes set on 3 plants. It's a bushy plant and stands a little over 4' since planting on Mothers Day. The fruit tastes sweet. I'm very pleased with this plant thus far and I will grow it again next year. Big Zac; I have two Big Zac plants (RL)with two tomatoes on one and 1 tomato from a double fused bloom on the other. I am not growing these for primary consumption but for competition sized fruit. I have however heard that the tomato tastes really good with moderate acid. It's another bushy plant and currently stands close to 5' since planting on Mother's Day. Julia Last edited by PA_Julia; June 28, 2012 at 01:27 PM. |
June 29, 2012 | #5 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Durhamville,NY
Posts: 2,706
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The 4 P-20s I received as cuttings all vary from one another in how blue the foliage is.
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July 1, 2012 | #6 |
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Upstate NY, zone 4b/5a
Posts: 21,169
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Also, I know that no tomato really does that well in the 100+ degree Texas heat but, of these, which have you had the best luck with?
***** First I really don't like to make comments about varieties where seeds have already been purchased. IMO it's much better to ask before choosing varieties to buy. That said, I don't know how the following will do in your area of TX, but I have many TX tomato friends and a good number of those you list they grow and they do well. Ananas Noire, I don't like the taste of varieties where there are many colors both inside and on the exterior, but many do Azoychka, excellent early variety Berkeley Tie-Dye, have not grown Big Rainbow (I have seed left from last year but this one did terrible for me with no fruits), one of the better gold/red bicolors IMO along with Lucky Cross and Virginia Sweets and Marizol Gold. Big Zac, have not grown the F1, just the OP Black and Brown Boar, have not grown Black Truffle Hybrid (From Burpee), why not grow the original from whence Burpee copped the name, the original being Japanese Black Trefle. Bull's Heart, not a specific variety since there are red ones and pink ones from various countries/areas Ceylon, not worth it IMO Celebrity (Main Crop), IMO there are MUCH better F1's than Celebrity, which I have grown Cherokee Purple, does well for almost everyone, great taste and yield Costoluto Genovese, I've grown all 3 Costolutos and have not been impressed with taste compared to others used for sauce. German Giant, can't remember if I grew it, or not. LOL Great White, forget it, bland as can be, not white either/ Of the larger so called White varieties I think White Queen is the best/ Green Giant, excellent tasting PL green when ripe Heinz 1439 VFA (Main Crop), have not grown Hillbilly, another gold/red bicolor of which there are about 200 named ones. I stated my preferences under the listing for Big Rainbow Jetsetter, have not grown Kosovo, excellent large pink heart which does well for all most everyone Mexico, an OK large pink beefsteak Mr. Stripey, not beloved by everyone, that's for sure, yet another gold/red bicolor I've grown. Widely available almost everywhere since seeds were sent to Seeds by Design in Ca, a wholesale place, by Wayne Hilton, the former owner of TT and that stable of companies that were sold to Jung's and SBD sends out a seed list to many commercial farmers and plant places so youll find it at Big Box stores, nurseries, etc. I think it's spindly and low yielding, others would disagree. Mule Team, one of several bred by Joe Bratka's father and MT is fine, but I prefer Box Car Willie and Red Barn/ Neves Azorean ( Red), OK, I introduced it and I'm not biased but I'm not the only one who thinks it's a great variety, taste and yield-wise as well Omar's Lebanese, another one I introduced, large pink fruits with excellent taste. P20 Blue (Purely Novelty), I dislike the taste of it, novelty or not. Paul Robeson, have not grown Persimmon, just don't like the taste Porterhouse Hybrid, have not grown Porter's Pride, have not grown Purple Calabash, one of only a few varieties that does have some purple, the others being Noire des Cosebeauf and Purple Smudge and it's orange fleshed version. I've grown the first three and while the Noire one is one has the most beautiful fruits I've seen, the taste of all of them is far too aggressive for me. Riesentraube, a whole thread on this and well worth growing/ Royesta, have not grown Sandul Moldovan, another one I introduced which many love, med size pink fruits Sun Gold, if the F1, great variety, if one of the OP's not the same as the F1/ Solar Fire, have not grown Thessaloniki, can't remember if I grew it Watermelon Beefsteak, nothing special Zapotec, can often be hollow Also looking at adding: Arbuznyi, have not grown Indian Stripe, a version of Cherokee Purple I introduced, does well for almost everyone, fruits a bit lighter than CP, more to the truss and slightly smaller than CP, all else the same and many now prefer to CP sites where I read. JD's Special C-Tex (EXTREMELY intrigued by this one.) , have not grown
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Carolyn |
July 1, 2012 | #7 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Hamilton, Texas
Posts: 382
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What are your thoughts on Dr. Lyle? I've planned on ordering some of those and dropping a few of the varieties above. |
July 1, 2012 | #8 |
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Upstate NY, zone 4b/5a
Posts: 21,169
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Dr. Lyle and Dr. Neal IMO are both excellent varieties. Both indet with large pink beefsteak shaped fruits, heavy RL foliage cover, and in the 1-2# range and yield for a varieties with such large fruits is also excellent and the taste is also excellent.
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Carolyn |
July 1, 2012 | #9 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: CA
Posts: 494
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I'm on the central coast of CA, hot summers, cool nights for the most part. I've grown a few that are on your list.
Berkeley Tie-Dye- cool looking tomato, not very prolific for me, looked better than it tasted Black and Brown Boar- fantastic small tomatoes, kept producing until frost Black Truffle Hybrid -nada Celebrity (Main Crop)- great producer, good taste Cherokee Purple - only got a few tomatoes, but good Costoluto Genovese -growing this this year, no tomatoes yet, high hopes! Kosovo - very few tomatoes, wipsy foliage but great tasting Paul Robeson- disappointing, really wanted more |
July 1, 2012 | #10 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: New York Zone 6
Posts: 479
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Baizanator, one quibble I have with your email is the claim of more vigor from hybrids, which only in rare instances have I seen having grown both heirlooms and hybrids. My clime is not at all like yours, however, of those you listed I would vote for Cherokee Purple and Sungold. In my garden, while Riesentraube is delicious, I've not had good yield the two times that I have grown it; it's also a bit later in the season for a cherry and I don't know if that has any bearing for you.
I too have not had good luck with Big Rainbow; both times I grew it I did not get anything, and the second time the plant succumbed in mid-season. On the other hand, I've done well with Hillbilly. The one time I grew Mr. Stripey, I had a mule plant, which I understand this variety has a propensity to do. I liked Neves Azorean Red, but didn't get a big yield. Royesta was a bomb. I'm a big fan of Eva Purple Ball (heirloom, ave. 6 oz or more dark pink and very productive; Cherokee Green if you want to have a green-when-ripe variety; Rutgers (medium size orange-red, plentiful); Lemon Boy (yellow hybrid which has done well in a variety of conditions); Black Cherry, in addition to the ones that I mentioned above. Good luck! Let us know how it works out. |
July 12, 2012 | #11 |
Two-faced Drama Queen
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Bellevue Psychiatric Hospital
Posts: 955
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I've only grown sungold from your list. I got the plants from another tomatovillian here, DarJones. I grew them for my students, they are young - 5-8 yr olds.
They love them. Very sweet and delicious. I did get open pollinated seeds from another member here, I havent tried them yet. |
July 12, 2012 | #12 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: northern NJ zone 6b
Posts: 1,862
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I don't have too many on that list either, but I do have Berkley Tie Dye and I can tell you it seemed to kick into high gear when the heat set in and its doing really well. Haven't tasted it yet. My Kosovo sort of peetered out in the flower production department, but Danko is kicking butt out there and continues to flower like crazy. Mule Team is holding its own and is very productive as well as being quite a dense bushy sort of plant. I'd think all those leaves will help prevent sunscald in your area. Black and Brown Boar was a disappointment for me, doesn't seem terribly productive but others rave about it, so it could just be a dud seed I started lol.
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Antoniette |
July 13, 2012 | #13 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Alabama
Posts: 7,068
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I agree with Carolyn; there are better hybrids than Celebrity. Neves Azorean Red is a fantastic tomato and has done very well for me as has Kosovo. The biggest lack on your list is large pinks and blacks. Stump of the World, Brandywine Sudduth's, Limbaugh's Legacy, Brandywine Cowlick's, and Terhune are all very good large pinks with great flavor. Besides Cherokee Purple you might want to try Indian Stripe, JD's Special C Tex, Black Krim, Spudakee, Gary O' Sena, and Dana's Dusky Rose which have all done well in our southern heat and humidity.
Don't know why you have a dislike of potato leaf plants since many of the best tomatoes I have grown have come from them. |
July 13, 2012 | #14 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Hamilton, Texas
Posts: 382
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Quote:
As for the reason for disliking PL plants, it's pretty simple. I grow out seed, keep what I want and my dad's father grows out the rest. He's not a PL fan so I don't grow them unless I'm going to keep them myself. |
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July 13, 2012 | #15 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Alabama
Posts: 7,068
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I have grown many Celebrity plants in the past but after growing Big Beef I never used Celebrity again. Bella Rosa is a good tasting hybrid and the fruit are very large and it is a massive producer. Jetsetter is also better to me but it is not a good tomato for the mid summer heat. Jetsetter does much better as a spring or fall tomato since it ripens very slowly once the intense summer heat arrives here. I really like Ramapo but it is not very tolerant of diseases. A Brandywine hybrid called Brandy Boy is a fantastic tasting tomato producing very large fruit a bit earlier than the heirlooms with the Brandywine name.
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