Member discussion regarding the methods, varieties and merits of growing tomatoes.
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August 29, 2014 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Indiana
Posts: 1,124
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In praise of a few notable varieties for 2014
This summer was largely cool and wet, although has turned warm and wet in the past couple of weeks. Great for leaf diseases; bad for tomatoes! I didn't spray, but I still had some varieties that did pretty well:
Burpee's Orange Wellington. (Ind.) This was a standout variety for me. It was slightly later than several, but produced large, smooth, meaty, flavorful tomatoes. And it resisted the leaf diseases (Septoria, mainly) better than any others I grew. No BER at all. I will definitely grow this one again. Incidently, this one was available in the Burpee seed racks at Lowes this year for about $2.50. LaRoma III. (Det.) I'd never grown this one before, but for a paste tomato, it was very flavorful. Grew it next to Opalka. LaRoma III outproduced Opalka with certainly better-looking tomatoes, and tasted at least as good. Was early enough to produce a good crop before Septoria defoliated it. Virtually no BER. There were several other good varieties, but the Septoria ate the plants alive, especially the determinates and O.P. varieties. -GG Last edited by Greatgardens; August 29, 2014 at 05:01 PM. |
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