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Old May 30, 2012   #1
Steve Magruder
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Default Cow's Tit paste tomato - It's just strange

I'm relatively new to tomato gardening. This is probably my fourth or fifth (nonsuccessive) season growing tomatoes as an adult, so maybe I haven't seen much.

But the Cow's Tit paste tomato I'm growing new this year is really throwing curve balls at me.

It feels different from other tomatoes. The leaves are kind of fluffy and limpy, yet healthy.

It grows in all sorts of crazy directions.

It seems more "weedy" than other tomatoes in how it almost seems to dislike being trained as it grows.

For those of you who have grown this cultivar, have you experienced the same things? And if so, did you do different things with it during the season to maintain it compared to other tomato plants?
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Old May 30, 2012   #2
Skaggydog
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The fruit should be hung up in little bras, that's all I know.
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Old May 30, 2012   #3
RayR
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I've never seen that one but it is listed on Tatiania's TOMATObase. The wispy leaves are normal for that variety. I'm growing a few Opalka plants which also have wispy leaves.
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Old May 30, 2012   #4
Steve Magruder
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RayR View Post
I've never seen that one but it is listed on Tatiania's TOMATObase. The wispy leaves are normal for that variety. I'm growing a few Opalka plants which also have wispy leaves.
What a fantastic resource that is! Thank you for pointing me to it.
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Old May 30, 2012   #5
Tom C zone 4/5
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I grow CT. I've been a booster of its use. It does present longer and limper leaves than other RL tomato.

Based on past trials, I'd water this plant based on how dry the soil was vs how the leaves look.
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Old May 31, 2012   #6
Tom C zone 4/5
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Other similar accessions have the same leaf structure (and IMO the same watering needs).

Of my trial that would be Henry's, Gilbertie, and Opalka.

I still think Cows Tit is the pick of the litter for productivity, flavor, and earliness.
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Old May 31, 2012   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tom C zone 4/5 View Post
Other similar accessions have the same leaf structure (and IMO the same watering needs).

Of my trial that would be Henry's, Gilbertie, and Opalka.

I still think Cows Tit is the pick of the litter for productivity, flavor, and earliness.
http://t.tatianastomatobase.com:88/w...Paste_Tomatoes

The ultimate litter to pick from is in the link above.

I've grown many many paste tomatoes and yes, some much better than others, and many have the knob like appendage at the blossom end as does Cows Tit which as I remember was named by Keith M.

http://t.tatianastomatobase.com:88/wiki/Cow%27s_Tit

Just checking my memory on who found it and named it and it was Keith when he was in NC getting his MS degree with Dr. Randy Gardner of NCSU.
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Old June 7, 2012   #8
Steve Magruder
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I've had my Cow's Tit in the ground for just over a month, and the plant is at least three feet tall (the tallest of all my tomato plants planted at the same time) It has some blossoms but no fruit forming yet. Is this normal?
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Old June 7, 2012   #9
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.....

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Old June 7, 2012   #10
Steve Magruder
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It's possible I just can't see the fruit that's growing. This plant has dense greenery, and some blossoms/fruit could be hiding from eyesight.
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Old June 7, 2012   #11
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I was more taken aback at the idea of having your cows' tit in the ground that long, lol.

Sometimes it takes awhile to get flowers though, some varieties are particular about weather, if you used high nitrogen fertilizer that can certainly delay blooming.
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Old June 8, 2012   #12
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What a difference a day makes. I spotted the first fruit growing near the top of the plant, where I looked most of the time. And then I inspected the rest of the plant more close-up, and found 2-3 fruit growing in the lower part of the plant that's hard to see. Can't wait to see these mature!
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Old June 8, 2012   #13
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I'd grow it just because it has the words cow and tit in it's name. LOL!!


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Old June 12, 2012   #14
Steve Magruder
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I'm finding that the stems from the plant are very difficult to train in the usual way, as they so, so wispy. Except for the main stem, tying them to anything like I would do with other tomatoes isn't viable. What I think _is_ working is weaving stems around each other and around the cage wires. I almost feel like I'm starting to weave a basket to keep this plant holding together as it continues to grow up like a major weed.
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Old June 20, 2012   #15
Steve Magruder
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Update:

11 fruits are growing. Plant is overflowing tall cage. As wild and wispy as the stems/leaves are, the fruits are strange too. These are really sizable cow udders, much bigger than romas and comparable paste tomatoes.

Last edited by Steve Magruder; June 20, 2012 at 07:09 PM.
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