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Old June 19, 2012   #1
hoffman900
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Default Southern New Jersey Tomatoes

Here are a few shots of my tomatoes this year. All plants are close to double digits with fruit sets (and are FILLED with blossoms), and the Granaderoes (plums) are setting their sixth cluster and have already passed the 5' mark (as have the Brandy Boys). It's hard to get photos of all the tomatoes since they're covered under foliage. All plants but two are taken to a single stem. The other two are dual stems.

The two shorter looking plants had their stems break off. Not a big deal. I'll just let another sucker grow and use that.

Varieties seen:
Brandy Boy
Delicious
Cherokee Purple
Green Zebra
Granadero
Red Ponderosa

Enjoy and let me know if you have any questions.











Last edited by hoffman900; June 20, 2012 at 02:08 PM.
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Old June 19, 2012   #2
augiedog55
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i can't see the pictures
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Old June 19, 2012   #3
hoffman900
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Hmm..

Try this until I figure out why it won't work: http://www.flickr.com/photos/52563404@N02/
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Old June 20, 2012   #4
PA_Julia
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They all look great and appear extremely healthy.


Julia
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Old June 20, 2012   #5
kath
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They sure are doing well! Your photo reminds me of summers at the Jersey shore!

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Old June 20, 2012   #6
hoffman900
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Kath,

I'm a native of Ocean City. My garden is at my grandmother's house which is in the center part of the island. I live / grew up on the south end (I have pole beans and sunflowers growing at my parent's). After 4 years at school, I moved home and commute to school which saves me some money. Not sure if I'll do this again next year as I'm looking at grad schools out west.

Here is the current count. I'm not so much interested in count as I am in weight, but that will come later. I'll being doing statistical analysis on the data at the end of the season. I'll post the results here.

Red Ponderosa (RP)
Granadero (G)
Green Zebra (GZ)
Cherokee Purple (CP)
Delicious (D)
Brand Boy (BB)

RP1: 5
RP2: 7
RP3: 7
RP4: 8 (vine broke, so I'm waiting for another sucker to get long enough to start training)
G1: 21
G2: 23
G3: 22
G4: 13 (vine broke as well)
G5: 25
G6: 28
GZ1: 17
GZ2: 8 (interesting)
CP1: 9
CP2: 6
CP3: 8
CP4: 9
D1: 7
D2/3 (trained to two vines): 15
BB1/2 (trained to two vines): 16
BB3: 7

I just fertilized Monday evening, so all plants are in the 20+ bud range. I'll see how many set in this heat. I suspect the Red Ponderosa plants will set well as they're supposedly good in warm/humid environments.
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Old June 20, 2012   #7
kath
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You're really south! I lived in north Jersey- we used to stay near Seaside in the 50's and loved to visit Island Beach when it became a park in the 60's. Happy memories...
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Old June 20, 2012   #8
Mudman
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I can't see any pictures.
But then I clicked on your other link.
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Old June 20, 2012   #9
dpurdy
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hoffman900,
Love the pictures. I like race cars just about as much as I do tomatoes. Is that cam shaft from your race car? Nice tomatoes and nice car.
DP
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Old June 21, 2012   #10
hoffman900
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DP,

Thanks! I help wrench on that TR4. We were having camshaft reliability problems, so I had to send those pictures to a cam grinder to come up with a more reliable set up. I crew on a SCCA GT car as well.

Here is in-car from the TR. The driver qualified 2nd of 55, but started mid pack do to some issues in the qualifying race. He is 76 years old at the time of this video. He's a former top IMSA and SCCA driver from the '60s and '70s and does almost all of his own car prep and engine assembly.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qH5UweSaS3o

Bob

Last edited by hoffman900; June 21, 2012 at 09:36 AM.
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Old June 21, 2012   #11
dpurdy
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hoffman900,
Thanks for the video. Have been to the Glenn a few times over the years. I live about a hour and a half from there. I grew up with stock car racing, my father drove for years. Hard to imagine motor-heads working in the garden. Funny thought. Be careful not to get any grease or oil on your tomato plants.
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Old July 11, 2012   #12
hoffman900
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dpurdy View Post
hoffman900,
Thanks for the video. Have been to the Glenn a few times over the years. I live about a hour and a half from there. I grew up with stock car racing, my father drove for years. Hard to imagine motor-heads working in the garden. Funny thought. Be careful not to get any grease or oil on your tomato plants.
DP
I find it very similar to working on a car. When you understand how a plant works, it's really just like an engine of sorts.

Here is some recent garden pictures:

1st: Red Ponderosa
2nd: Delicious cluster
3rd: Today's pick
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 564014_10100278420225536_1774382839_n.jpg (94.7 KB, 23 views)
File Type: jpg 600201_10100278420519946_695864648_n.jpg (89.4 KB, 26 views)
File Type: jpg photo (27).jpg (287.0 KB, 30 views)
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Old July 14, 2012   #13
lakelady
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wow, very nice !! I wish I had that many ripe tomatoes yet! You're only one zone ahead of me though...mmm..maybe 2.
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Old July 15, 2012   #14
hoffman900
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I've picked 48lbs to date. My Granandero's are leading the way with 18lbs of that total. The Red Ponderosa's are second with about 12lbs.
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Old July 18, 2012   #15
hoffman900
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I've crossed the 50lbs mark!

Here are my current picked totals:
Red Ponderosa (4 plants): 11.42lbs _ 18 tomatoes _ .63lb avg _ 10.08oz avg
Granadero (6 plants): 19.01lbs _ 65 tomatoes _ .29lb avg _ 4.64oz avg
Green Zebra (2 plants): 2.9lbs _ 9 tomatoes _ .32lb avg _ 5.12oz avg
Delicious (2 plants): 2.625 _ 4 tomatoes _ .65 avg _ 10.4oz avg
Cherokee Purple (5 plants): 8lbs _ 17 tomatoes _ .47lb avg _ 7.52oz avg
Brandy Boy (2 plants): 7.88lbs _ 12 tomatoes _ .65lb avg _ 10.4oz avg

Most plants are single vine, but a few are two vines. It will be interesting to compare the productivity between the two methods.

Here is my largest so far (1st picture). It's a Brandy Boy, but I have a Red Ponderosa that I'm picking before all the rain today that should beat it.

The 2nd picture is of a Biltmore that came through work. If I was growing determinates, they would be all that I would grow.

I've been picking Cherokee Purples. While I like the flavor, they're having horrible splitting problems that the others aren't having. I don't think I would grow them again. The Red Ponderosas have been the beefsteak winner so far. They're smaller plants the Brandy Boy's, but I'm getting much more large tomatoes and heavier sets. The Delicious variety so far has been m'eh. They're nothing special.
Attached Images
File Type: jpg photo (28).jpg (344.8 KB, 19 views)
File Type: jpg photo (29).jpg (320.9 KB, 22 views)

Last edited by hoffman900; July 18, 2012 at 05:13 PM.
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