Member discussion regarding the methods, varieties and merits of growing tomatoes.
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July 13, 2012 | #16 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Hamilton, Texas
Posts: 382
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July 15, 2012 | #17 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Hamilton, Texas
Posts: 382
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As I continue to narrow down my list for next season (I'd like to have around 12 varieties), I have come up with the following types, based on comments from others, etc. Please discuss yield results on the following varieties:
Amazon Chocolate Ananas Noire Arbuznyi Atkinson Berkeley Tie-Dye Pink Black Cherry Black and Brown Boar Blue Bayou Bosque Blue Brandywine-Sudduth Cuostralee Dr. Lyle Dr. Wyche Yellow Grandfather Ashlock Humph J.D.'s C-Tex Special Kellogg's Breakfast Malachite Box Red Barn Riesentraube Sioux Sun Gold Hybrid Texas Star White Tomesol I'd like to only have 1-2 blacks and I'd like J.D.'s to be one of those. I'm leaning toward Arbuznyi for the other but I'm not sure. Bolded ones are the way I'm leaning. Please give any experience with any of these. |
July 15, 2012 | #18 |
Two-faced Drama Queen
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Bellevue Psychiatric Hospital
Posts: 955
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This is my first year growing them. Many tomatoes have been earlier than usual this year due to the warmer than usual temps here in Connecticut. The plants are loaded and we did get about 1/2 pound or so already, but it is hard to tell because the kids just eat them right off the vines.
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July 15, 2012 | #19 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: northern NJ zone 6b
Posts: 1,862
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I do have the Arbuznyi in my yard, and while none have turned, I can tell you it is a good producer for me so far. I was under the impression it was "fair" but I have quite a lot of nice little tomatoes out there so far.
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Antoniette |
July 15, 2012 | #20 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Hamilton, Texas
Posts: 382
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Yeah, I am personally going to have 12 plants at my apartment this year due to restrictions on EarthBox space. I'll have about 60 plants at my dads, grandparent's etc but, given my space restrictions, yield is very important. I'm going to have one blue and Arbuznyi. Those will be the only two where I am a bit forgiving on yield.
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July 16, 2012 | #21 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Hamilton, Texas
Posts: 382
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So... I've added Break O'Day to the list. Based on reviews and experiences it seems to be a heavy producer of good quality fruit.
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July 16, 2012 | #22 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: northern NJ zone 6b
Posts: 1,862
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I have Break O Day and Mule Team in the garden, and both are producing nice clusters of fruit for me, just nothing red yet so I cannot tell you how they taste. PM me if you want seeds of either one.
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Antoniette |
July 19, 2012 | #23 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Mississippi
Posts: 177
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A few comments on some of my experiences, but you should note that some of these are from last year, when temps hit 100 degrees very early. Those are noted as year 1, and this year noted as year 2, when temps topped out in the low 90's and we had tolerable rain.
I'm located in south Mississippi about 70 miles north of the coast. I am also in an ongoing process of ammending heavy clay soils, and am losing sunlight every year to canopy spread from pine trees (as indicated by my limited production, so don't let production numbers influence you too much.). I have been sharing heirlooms with family and friends, and the most resilient in the heat have been: for size - Magnum, Church and Mule Team, for production - Brown and Black Boar, Paul Robeson and Aussie. My Mother just picked a 2 pound, 6 ounce Church today. My comments re: production are compared to Better Boys. For flavor, I prefer Mule Team, Paul Robeson, Omar's Lebaneese Ananas Noire -- vitually no production (yr 1) Azoychka Berkeley Tie-Dye -- very few fruits (yr 2) 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 --good production of golf ball size fruits (yr 2) Black Truffle Hybrid (From Burpee) Bull's Heart Ceylon Celebrity (Main Crop) Cherokee Purple -- set 1 plant out late, got 1 fruit (yr 2) Costoluto Genovese -- 3-4 fruits on 1 plant (yr 2) German Giant Great White Green Giant Heinz 1439 VFA (Main Crop) Hillbilly Jetsetter Kosovo Mexico -- fair production (yr 1 and 2) Mr. Stripey Mule Team -- prolific (yr 1 and 2) Neves Azorean Omar's Lebanese -- 3 - 4 fruits on 2 plants (yr 1 and 2) P20 Blue (Purely Novelty) Paul Robeson -- good producer (yr 1 and 2) Persimmon Porterhouse Hybrid Porter's Pride Purple Calabash -- no production (yr 1) Riesentraube Royesta Sandul Moldovan Sun Gold Solar Fire Thessaloniki Watermelon Beefsteak Zapotec |
July 19, 2012 | #24 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Mississippi
Posts: 177
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I grew the Berkely Tie Dye, not the pink. Was expecting an acidic tomato, and found that not to be the case. Brown and Black Boar outproduced it far and away. In fact, I had the Brown and Black Boars in the same row as my Better Boys, and I probably had more B & B Boars than Better Boys.
If you have any inclination to grow the variagated varieties from Wild Boar Farms, go ahead and do it. I enjoyed showing them off to friends, and they were a great addition to salsa for color alone. |
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