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Old February 19, 2009   #1
Woodchuck
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Default Soil, Salt and Tomato Taste.......

Interesting article from Rutger's on the effects of nutrient deficiencies and tomato taste.

"The Israeli researchers described their findings as “results show
that the quality – in terms of chemical constituents (mainly sugars and acids), pigments, and
especially taste – of fruits from saline-treated plants is superior to that of those from control
plants."

Soil, Salt and Taste.......

http://njfarmfresh.rutgers.edu/docum...toSalt2009.pdf


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Old February 19, 2009   #2
stormymater
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Now that's a good thing for our location! We have salt residue on everything down here. Love those Cook College fellers!
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Old February 20, 2009   #3
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Really intresting articles. Learning so much here.
Kat
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Old February 20, 2009   #4
carolyn137
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Woodchuck, are you the person who started the thread at GW with almost the same title as I remember it?

http://forums.gardenweb.com/forums/l...082286.html?13

I posted in that thread about the tomatoes grown in Israel called Desert Sweets where the seed is germinated with sweet water and the plants are grown to maturity using the brackish waters that underlie a good part of Israel.

I transferred the link here so that others who might be interested can see what others elsewhere posted.
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Old February 20, 2009   #5
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Interesting....Think I will do a trial with water from the Atlantic...looks like 1/3 of a gallon per plant / per season according to Rutgers (.31) Will post results. My grandmother always asked us to bring gallon jugs of sea water when we visited the ocean. I wonder now what she did with it??

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Old February 20, 2009   #6
Penny
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Thanks for the articles.
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Old February 20, 2009   #7
Woodchuck
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Quote:
Originally Posted by carolyn137 View Post
Woodchuck, are you the person who started the thread at GW with almost the same title as I remember it?
Nope, That wasn't me.


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