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Old April 17, 2018   #16
Nan_PA_6b
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Thanks, Henry! I ought to get some updated pics here soon. The F3's are an interesting bunch.

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Old April 18, 2018   #17
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Seedling pics: First, a Hardin's Miniature seedling. Note the short internode distance between leaves and the natural curling of the leaves.
20180418_202800_001.jpg

Note the short internodes and thick stem on this Rae-F2:
20180418_202810.jpg

This Rae-F2 has the long, droopy, "wispy" leaves of the other parent, Anna Maria's Heart coupled with the leaf curl of Hardin's Mini, with a thin stem:
20180418_202841.jpg

Nan

Last edited by Nan_PA_6b; April 18, 2018 at 10:45 PM.
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Old June 9, 2018   #18
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Eugen & I are growing out nearly 60 Rae-F2's between us, with more on tap for a second planting. We've got a variety of fruit shapes.
Very oblong blunt-ended:
20180609_200717_001_resized.jpg
Pretty hearts:
20180609_200942_001_resized.jpg
Rounds:
20180609_200826_resized.jpg
Some are extremely prolific:
20180609_200652_resized.jpg
Eugen & I each have one of these "candle" shaped:
33937657_1731378983590114_722433092828004352_n_resized.jpg
Eugen has a small micro; that's 20 cm = about 8":
33943949_1731383276923018_4183392936232222720_n_resized.jpg
Ugliest tomato:
34033503_1731378933590119_6992703144438267904_n_resized.jpg

Last edited by Nan_PA_6b; June 9, 2018 at 11:10 PM. Reason: getting the darned picture to show up.
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Old June 10, 2018   #19
Lee
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Great looking results.
I'll be interested to hear how each tastes, and the eventual size/shape/color of each.


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Old June 10, 2018   #20
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I'm also curious to see how this turns out!
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Old June 10, 2018   #21
Nan_PA_6b
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Thanks, Lee & Doug! I'll keep on posting.


Today I started doing the hardest thing ever: culling the ones that don't have large enough fruit to keep. Pulling beautiful 3' dwarfs out of the ground to replace them with seedlings, in order to evaluate more F2's in one season.


I have two that are about the size of miniatures, with small heart-shaped fruit. I'm going to save seeds, and work on that one separately when/if I have time/space.


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Old June 12, 2018   #22
dfollett
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nan_PA_6b View Post
Thanks, Lee & Doug! I'll keep on posting.


Today I started doing the hardest thing ever: culling the ones that don't have large enough fruit to keep. Pulling beautiful 3' dwarfs out of the ground to replace them with seedlings, in order to evaluate more F2's in one season.


I have two that are about the size of miniatures, with small heart-shaped fruit. I'm going to save seeds, and work on that one separately when/if I have time/space.


Nan
Culling is difficult....

I just saw this thread. Great project. Good luck with it.
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Old June 12, 2018   #23
NicolasGarcia
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Nan_PA_6b good luck with your project.
Very good job and I will follow you attentively
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Old June 12, 2018   #24
Rajun Gardener
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Nan, good luck on your project. I'm glad you posted pics of all the shapes, it's fun to see what develops and I'll be following.
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Old June 13, 2018   #25
bower
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Gotta love those crosses that produce every shape in the book (and then some).
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Old June 13, 2018   #26
KarenO
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Great job to you and your friend, interesting results so far
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Old June 13, 2018   #27
gdaddybill
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Exciting! Hope to give some of your babies a Texas trial someday.
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Old June 13, 2018   #28
Nan_PA_6b
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From Eugen's Romanian garden, three F2's:
35200413_1745592735502072_2673097270328557568_n_resized.jpg


This will be red or pink someday:

35265114_1745592858835393_4458135379907706880_n_resized.jpg

This is the miniature:
35192675_1745592705502075_8931070839160307712_n_resized.jpg
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Old June 16, 2018   #29
Nan_PA_6b
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Eugen's first ripe F2 was 45 DTM. His plants have full sun. Mine will probably take a little longer because they only get 5-6 hours of sun. I really want the end product to be early. If they're early, each generation can be accomplished in about 4 1/2 months. I can get 2-3 generations per year and have f7 ready by planting time 2020. My mom is 87 and I want this tomato ready while she can still garden.

I have been keeping the plants to one stem so I can grow them close together, pinching off all suckers. Then I noticed one where there was no growing tip, so I figured I'd accidentally pinched it out. Then I noticed another, and another... That's the normal growth of a determinate tomato! The Hardin's Miniature parent has determinate growth, and a few are showing up in the F2's.



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Old June 25, 2018   #30
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My first ripe was 48 DTM.

Here are the first batch. Two are pink:
20180623_165802.jpg
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