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Old June 18, 2015   #16
Carriehelene
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Originally Posted by OzoneNY View Post
I grew them in Queens for 20 years. I miss the ease of growing in that superior soil.
Lol, I wondered why you had NY in your name when you're from TX. Now I know
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Old June 21, 2015   #17
OzoneNY
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my San Marzano collection thus far.

A few Super San Marzano and some Costuloto Genovese in the back of the line but all the foreground tomatos are SM

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Old June 21, 2015   #18
cjp1953
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I have 4 plants that doing great,they where the first to have tomatos.Make great sauce and love to roast them at 250 degrees for 4 or 5 hours split in two with olive oil and garlic.Comes out as sweet as can be.
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Old June 21, 2015   #19
Carriehelene
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Ozone, nice haul so far is it really different growing in TX compared to NY?
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Old June 21, 2015   #20
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Well, for one, nearer to NY we are still waiting to see any red
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Old June 22, 2015   #21
OzoneNY
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Yes. Growing here is a whole different set of rules. In NY I would plant out around Mothers Day and come back end of August and start picking till first frost. In N Dallas I start around St Patrick's Day and hope to get enough by around July 4th before it gets to 104 deg and everything burst into flames.
Also, in this part of the state it is heavy clay. So thick you could bake it as is and make shower tile. So it needs some good amending however the clay in my yard does have a good nutrient base so its not so bad, but not nearly as good as the rich sandy stuff I had in my yard in Queens.
Its more work here, but many in the area do well with just a little more effort and some good info.
My next door neighbors here are retired school teachers from Syracuse NY and her first year growing tomatoes here in TX was a flat out disaster, Second year was as bad as the first, though this year she did MUCH better. She was about to give up but that was because she was planting all wrong for this area. I was too but like I said, the rules are different but once I learn what to look out for and how to work with the season then it all began to come together.
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Old June 22, 2015   #22
Tracydr
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When you're harvesting greens, herbs and other cool weather stuff all winter, you may forget how much you loved NY.
Year round growing is a luxury. I may like my winter garden variety even better than the summer!
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Old June 22, 2015   #23
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The Dallas Fort Worth area was built on some of the best farm land in the country.
You nust have to know what you are doing with black prairie soil.
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Old June 22, 2015   #24
OzoneNY
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black prairie soil is what I have but the clay is really unlike anything I have seen before. But I agree, it worked in the past, my house sits on what used to be a farm field. Its got good nutrients but it sticks to everything!
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Old June 22, 2015   #25
Worth1
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OzoneNY View Post
black prairie soil is what I have but the clay is really unlike anything I have seen before. But I agree, it worked in the past, my house sits on what used to be a farm field. Its got good nutrients but it sticks to everything!
Not much of a window for working the soil that's for sure.
Either too wet or hard as a rock.
I remember when all of it was beautiful farm land years ago.
Now it is concrete and houses.
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Old June 28, 2015   #26
DrTrish
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I grew San Marzano for the first time last year and was very impressed. The plant produced a ton of tomatoes that made a very tasty pasta sauce, and the plants were the last in the garden to blight. I am interested to see how they do this year considering we have had nothing but heavy rain for 3 weeks.
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Old June 29, 2015   #27
korney19
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Anybody know how big the dwarf SM plant gets?
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Old June 29, 2015   #28
clkeiper
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Anybody know how big the dwarf SM plant gets?
I didn't know there was a dwarf. the SM I grew last year was less than 4' tall and it wasn't a dwarf.
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Old June 29, 2015   #29
PA_Julia
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My San Marzano plant is cranking along quite nicely despite the rain here in eastern PA.

I have three trusses at various stages of tomato growth at this point.
The plant seems a bit squatty being a bit shorter than many of my other plants but wide and bushy.

Overall I'm pleased with the plants performance.
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Old June 29, 2015   #30
Dewayne mater
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I have 2 SMs growing (first time for me), one in a container, one in soil. The productivity of both has been exceptional. They are both continuing to set fruit, though the trusses now only have a couple of fruit, whereas before the heat 3-5 per truss was common. The one in the soil is only behind Sungold for overall productivity.

Fresh SM pizza sauce on home made crust and pizza tonight. Will feature some thin sliced heirlooms on top as well because when you got em, eat em!

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