Member discussion regarding the methods, varieties and merits of growing tomatoes.
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June 1, 2010 | #16 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Alabama
Posts: 7,068
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The one that really hurts the most is TSWV. It kills so devastatingly fast that if the fruit is not to the blush stage you rarely ever get anything off of a plant infected with it. I was doing a little tying up yesterday and found my second and only Wes infected. Naturally the plant was 6 ft tall with nice little green toms. It was at the very top of the plant starting on one sucker and just beginning to spread so I went down to the first fork near the base and cut off that entire main stem in the hope that it hadn't spread that far. Now I have just half a plant with little hope it will be disease free. So to get to the question, I would like to see some varieties that are TSWV tolerant that actually taste good and aren't hard as rocks. |
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June 1, 2010 | #17 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Evansville, IN
Posts: 2,984
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Try using Bolseno or Sophya in crosses with large fruited, tasty heirlooms. Each is TSWV tolerant, large red fruit, indeterminate and heathy growers in the heat. Their flavor is acceptable, even quite good under the right conditions. They will impart TSWV tolerance in 1/4 of the F2 plants and you may be able to capture the trait.
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June 1, 2010 | #18 | |
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Deer tolerance, hmmmmmmm. I think I have that figured out. I love the taste of venison. Ted |
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June 1, 2010 | #19 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Riverside, CA
Posts: 942
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"Dwarf plants with great tasting tomatoes is a real challenge"
Think we have come past this point in the Dwarf Project. Maybe the best tomatoes I have ever tasted came off some of the Dwarfs. "due to the genetic drag inherent in dwarves against flavor." Whats This?
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Vince |
June 1, 2010 | #20 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Evansville, IN
Posts: 2,984
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But I'm encouraged when I hear that genetic drag relative to low level of flavor has been overcome with some of the dwarf varieties coming out of your Project. Did anyone in the Project notice the genetic drag I'm referring to along the way? |
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June 1, 2010 | #21 | |
Tomatopalooza™ Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: NC-Zone 7
Posts: 2,188
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it before. But to answer your question another way perhaps... yes there were some major spitters that came out. However, there are some major spitters in the indeterminate world as well, so I don't think it is unique to the dwarves. The other fruit traits we started selecting for are size and color. We now have large (10~18oz.) fruit of just about every color available. The Summertime Gold I described above put out an 18oz fruit last year for me and produced almost 11 pounds of fruit on a 3' tall plant! The only other plant that exceeded that total was a hybrid that gave me 18 pounds... which was a new dwarf cross! Can't wait for the F2s on that one. Lee
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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. |
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June 1, 2010 | #22 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Riverside, CA
Posts: 942
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Ok-We are kind of hijacking this thread
Travis-I'll give you an obvious example of where I have observed NO "genetic Drag"(if I understand correctly-being a lay man) with the Dwarfs. Last Fall I grew out the first generation of frosty F2 Dwarfs. All tasted phenomenal, and some could arguably put a good Indian stripe on the shelf as far as flavor is concerned. However, I grew some happy(F2 or F3, and Dopey F2 or F3) plants a ways back and they were really spitters. As Lee pointed out Spitters can also arise from non-dwarf crosses. My opinion is the following... if you cross two extremely flavorful cultivars you are bound to get something very good to superb. If you cross a great tasting variety with an average one, you are not sure what you are going to get, although you may find a few tasty segregates even if the F1 is bad. If you cross two spitters, your unlikely to get a tasty tomato. JMHO.
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Vince |
June 2, 2010 | #23 |
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"Ok-We are kind of hijacking this thread"
I started the thread and I don't care if it is hijacked. I'm enjoying the conversation. I do have a question though. Since the subject has changed to the dwarf tomatoes, will the fact that they are dwarf varieties mean that they are also determinate. Is it possible to have a dwarf variety of indeterminate? Ted |
June 2, 2010 | #24 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Riverside, CA
Posts: 942
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Actually most are indeterminant(I think), meaning they continuously set fruit until disease prevents or death. Craig should probably chime in to confirm, but all that I have grown have displayed this growth habit.
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Vince |
June 2, 2010 | #25 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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[Dwarf vs determinate-indeterminate]
Craig has a good description of "dwarf type" on this page: http://davesgarden.com/community/forums/t/778581/ Russian Red is a plant of that type developed in the 1940s in New Zealand that has excellent, sweet flavor in fairly small, round fruit. It could be earlier, for my climate. A perennial Earl's Faux that ripens first fruit in 60 days would be good.
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-- alias Last edited by dice; June 2, 2010 at 07:37 AM. Reason: +sweet |
June 2, 2010 | #26 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Riverside, CA
Posts: 942
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Thanks for the link dice. Now that we are seeing a wide variety of different segregates in the dwarf project, some of which appear not to have rugose foliage(Wispy Dwarfs), we probably could broaden Craigs description of Dwarf foliage to include these.
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Vince |
June 3, 2010 | #27 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Evansville, IN
Posts: 2,984
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Maybe genetic drag isn't the correct term. What I'm referring to is described in the last sentence of post #4 in this thread: http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=14696 and relates to the fruit to leaf ratio on dwarf plants, especially those with heavy fruit loads and shorter bush or bird nest growth habits whether determinate or indeterminate dwarf plants. Because even indeterminate dwarf types can have a lopsided fruit to leaf ratio. But again I am encouraged to learn that some of the Project varieties have overcome this "drag" as I called it earlier. |
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June 4, 2010 | #28 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Ranger, TX
Posts: 49
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I would echo the calls for disease resistance and heat tolerance. Early maturity would enhance these qualities.
This would be a huge project, probably more complicated than the Dwarf project. Crosses made with disease resistant hybrids x tasty heirlooms would have to be made in relatively disease free areas, and it would probably help to do the F1 growouts in the same areas. F2 would need to be done in areas where disease is almost certain, I'm thinking Florida for some reason. Later selections could probably be made in intermediate areas, like mine. Another approach could be selections from self fertilized disease resistant hybrids. Most disease resistances seem to be recessive, and should be easy to retain if there are no crosses. I have heard that a poor tasting hybrid can result in good tasting tomatoes in some of the segregations, so there is a chance that something very special might be found. Has anyone grown Bella Rosa? |
June 4, 2010 | #29 | |
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Quote:
Ted |
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June 4, 2010 | #30 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Riverside, CA
Posts: 942
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Don't want to be to argumentative, but I really don't want onlookers to be turned off to dwarfs by misunderstandings.
so Travis-"What I'm referring to is described in the last sentence of post #4 in this thread: http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=14696 and relates to the fruit to leaf ratio on dwarf plants." If you read the last sentance of post 4 (Craigs), it does not relate to dwarfs at all. It is about determinates. I don't believe Craig was lumping dwarf in this category. Dwarfs CAN HAVE an equal or maybe greater Leaf to fruit ratio than normal indeterminates. Take a look at some of these photos of Dwarf Wild Fred F6 (CARBONXNew Big Dwarf) from tonight. Front side Back side This variety is an 8.5+ in flavor and throws out some big ones(over1lb). If you count the leaves per fruit, I am guestemating you are going to have more than 100 leaves for 8 fruit. Large indeterminates likely have similar or MAYBE? less. So is the Dwarf lag effect or whatever it is called, myth or reality? The counter argument is ...OK if they have more leaves per fruit than normal indets, how many of the leaves actually get usable light-since they're so compact? this is a good question.
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