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Old February 26, 2006   #1
mepoozer
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Default Best tomato conditions- where to live?

I live in Littleton, CO. It snows too much, its cold too much, I'm tired of scraping car windows, but I want to grow tomatoes. What area of the US gives great conditions for a long season, and relatively disease-free. Oh yeah, and no scraping ice off of frozen car windows!

Karen
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Old February 26, 2006   #2
Mantis
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Come down to OZ. The more the merrier
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Old February 26, 2006   #3
Rena
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Just an opinion I am going to say Zone 7. Here in 8 the heat and humidity starts cooking up and you start losing them. Just a guess. I am from Colorado and when I left I did miss it. I recently went back as my Grandma passed and BRRRRRRRRRRRR I would never live there again!!!! My little boy (3) kept yelling as we were at the plane in Denver boarding for Grand ★★★★★★★★, "I want to go to FLorida"! He had never seen the snow or been in the cold. But he knows that Florida is warm :wink: .
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Old February 26, 2006   #4
Dunkel
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Zone 6 where I live is pretty good. Last season it was still rather cold at night until Memorial Day weekend, but that's rare. Normally plants can go in on May 15th unprotected and do fine. All my plants were healthy and productive up until October 22nd when we got a rare early snow fall. We got snow before a frost! LOL So we had a solid 5 months frost free and only 2 weeks during the summer were so brutal that blossoms dropped.
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Old February 26, 2006   #5
TomatoDon
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mepoozer ,

Best tomato conditions, where to live?

I would suggest living next door to Mischka , Craig, Carolyn, Bully, Grub, JJ61, Suze, NC Tomato, jtcm05, kctomato, angelstiger, PapaVic, catntree, spufleafwillie, Patrina_Pepperina, IMissColo, and many others here.

That covers all climates, many states, several nations, and at least two continents. But no matter what, they all know how to grow tomatoes, despite the climate!

Smile....

Don

There was an auction once and an old violin came up for bid. It was ragged and worn, and all out of tune. No one bid. The auctioneer kept pleading for offers, lowering and lowering the opening bid, but still no bids came. Then an old man humbly walked from the back of the crowd, went to the auctioneer, took the violin, tuned it, and began to play the classics beautifully. Hands went up, and the bids went higher and higher, until the old violin sold for a top price.

It's just in how you know to do it, and that is the hard part I'm trying to learn. I am totally new to Heirlooms. That's why I keep watching, learning, and asking questions here. Thanks to M, this is the best tomato site in the world to do that.

I'll shut up now.

Smiling again...

D
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Old February 27, 2006   #6
Plantersville
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Best tomato conditions, where to live?

HEAVEN!!!!
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Old February 27, 2006   #7
Suze
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Best tomato conditions, where to live?

Most of West Virginia (truly Almost Heaven *sigh*), except maybe the Panhandle, and even that wouldn't be too bad.

Northern Virginia, some parts of Kentucky, Southern Ohio.

Much of MO.
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Old February 27, 2006   #8
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There's generally pretty good growing conditions in the part of Kansas that I live. I'm about 5 miles from Missouri and 30 miles from Oklahoma. I have forgotten what my snow shovel looks like this winter. We've had about 1" total accumulation, but we could really use the moisture. It's supposed to be 78° on Wednesday.
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Old February 27, 2006   #9
jerseyjohn61
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Don,
Thanks for the acclaim, but my name should not be
mentioned with that TALL list of folks above.
Not even an honorable mention....JJ61
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Old February 27, 2006   #10
Suze
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Thanks for the acclaim, but my name should not be mentioned with that TALL list of folks above.

I don't feel like I belong on that list either. *blush* There's plenty of folks here that weren't mentioned on the list that have certainly grown a whole lot more tomatoes than I have. For starters, Earl should certainly be on any "tall" list way before me, and others too...
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Old February 27, 2006   #11
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I live in Utah where we get plenty of snow in the winter---probably not as much as you, but the climates are similar. I think you just have to plant a few early varieties along with everything else, and try to find a way to get them out a little bit early so the plants have time to establish themselves before it gets too hot. I didn't get my toms planted out until June last year, but I still got a decent crop because of the warm fall---Hoping to get my toms planted out earlier this spring. My sister-in-law is from Loveland and says the soil there is awful, so you might need to get a soil test done and amend it to get good results, or try growing some toms in containers. Good luck!!! There is nothing like homegrown tomatoes!!!

Tyffanie
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Old February 27, 2006   #12
sliphorn
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I'm in Zone 5B, Chicago, and never have trouble getting a really good crop of tomatoes.
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Old February 28, 2006   #13
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it was super hot this summer, new garden beds, not enough organic matter. Will probably do drip irrigation this summer, and hopefully get a good crop. Its much hotter here than in Cincinnati where Im from.
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Old February 28, 2006   #14
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New Jersey !
As long as you can stand sitting in traffic
for hours at a time to and from work ;
afford a huge housing bubble ,
and be lead by corrupt politian’s !

Come on down - we're not call the Garden State
for nothing ! lol ~ Tom

ps. I'm laughing , but really I'm not ...
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Old February 28, 2006   #15
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Not South Florida--even though we are growing all those wonderful winter tomatoes you are eating from the grocery store!
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