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February 1, 2013 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Romania - Vaslui County
Posts: 11
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Varieties,seed starting mix and time
After a few weeks of reading about tomato varieties, I came up with a list for trial, and I allmost made my mind about witch one to grow most, but because what `farmers` around here choose, I also have a bit of doubt. It`s also the fact that most of the hybrids I read about can`t be found here (except a few, including big beef) ,and vice versa, the ones that are being sold here I can't find info about them.
First let me tell you about the weather here: -The average last frost date is 22 april; earliest 23 march, latest 22 may. -The average first frost date is 14 oct; earliest 14 sept, latest 19 nov. -Summer: very hot, exceeding 100 deg F; the nights are also warm; -Spring and autumn: warm during the day, quite cold in the nights. -In the last years, few rains (last year allmost none), but in the past we had alot of rains. Farmers around here choose varieties like Belle F1, Lady Rosa F1 (both have a LSL gene for longer storage), Shirley F1, Cristal F1, Tamaris F1, Marissa F1, Francesca F1, and others. What I thought: Main crop: Big Beef Celebrity (not many though, the main target will be to have tomatoes for the whole season) Testing (I`m also looking for an outside variety): Early Girl CELEBRITY Bella Rosa BUSH EARLY GIRL SunGOLD Jetsetter Jet Star Opalka Black Cherry JULIET Rutgers Gardener's Delight Carbon Tamina Alicante Principe Borghese Legend Glacier Super Marmande Stupice Final place for them will be a greenhouse; for a planting scheme of 27.6" x 15.7", It will be 2000 seedlings(the greenhouse is ~46ft x 131ft). Q1: is this a good planting scheme? Some around here say 31.5" x 23.6" is a must . I`ll `train` them on wire. Q2: Is big beef the best option? My primary goal is to get the investment back (and fast, because I`ve already lost 1 year of production(took longer than expected to build the gosh darnoodley things), so not many left till I have to buy new polythene covers). I`ll apreciate any suggestions(even for next year), but because it`s too late to order seeds from abroad, do you know any of the ones I mentioned earlier(the ones most used here)? Q3: What to choose for planting outside? Q4: I want to start seeds on 11 feb ( inspired by the `moon planting` .. ), and transplant in the greenhouse before the middle of april. (ideally for me would be begining of apr; some say it should be done at the end of march ...(after 25th) (being in the greenhouse, and temps usually not going bellow 35-37F outside after mid-march). What do you think? I want to lay black polythene mulch a couple of weeks before transplanting outside (directly into the ground, mind you), and when the temperatures get high, mulch with wheat straws. Q5: Is it late, to incorporate composted (sheep and cow) manure? how much of it should I spread(ofcourse,after tilth the soil.)? Q6: even I knew It was late, I planted tomatoes last year; and ... to my shame, they are still there. What should I use to treat the soil? I can`t get hold of any `fancy` seed starting mix, the only ones I can buy are universal; description says : 70% blond peat(0-5 millimeters) (I just searched it and somewhere says "Once it has dried, it is hard to rehydrate." ) and 30% Black peat; pH:5.5-6.5; Aqua Flow. Last year we bought some type of peat, and after it dried, the water would run off from the surface/or it wouldn`t want to go in. Q7:I`ve asked around, and some say you shouldn`t let it dry (witch is a bad thing ... too much water there), and some say to mix it like this: 25% of the stuff, 25% composted manure, 25% black dirt (from the woods), and 10% sand. Back in the day, the seeding mix was like this, but without the peat; this mix is still used by some (because ... it`s cheap).I don`t know where to find peat moss, perlite, garden lime, or pine barks ... so .. any thoughts on how should I proceed? That`s it for now ... Thank you for reading! Some pictures: http://i1300.photobucket.com/albums/...ps039df71e.jpg http://i1300.photobucket.com/albums/...ps0adf462a.jpg http://i1300.photobucket.com/albums/...psee349587.jpg The bigger one will `host` tomatoes; a smaller one with peppers, and the other with beans, and after that possibly, cucumbers. |
February 1, 2013 | #2 | |||||||||||
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Durhamville,NY
Posts: 2,706
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Peat moss is used to hold water and because it's cheap. Garden lime is used to raise the ph of the peat. It is finely ground limestone. The sand and pine bark fines are used to improve the texture of the peat and again because they are cheap. The compost to provide fertility and texture to the mix. You can use any combination of material that will hold water but not too much. I wouldn't be opposed to starting seed in just woods dirt, which is basically composted leaves and wood. |
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February 2, 2013 | #3 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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This is a very old document, nearly 100 years old, so some of its
advice will be obsolete (some of the fertilizers, disease treatments, etc). In Starting the Tomato Plant, the author describes a hot-bed method that was once in wide use that you may find useful. What he calls "glass hot-bed sash" is simply a glass window in a frame that covers the top of the frame around the hot-bed. You should be able to open and close it. http://aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu/v...carver-tomato/ Here is a picture of a similar hot-bed on a smaller scale: http://i22.photobucket.com/albums/b3...otbed05029.jpg (I seem to remember that he covered the ends at night in case of frosts until the plants were transplanted into the garden.) The climate of the area where the author of the first document was working gets similarly hot in the summer, but not as cool at night in spring and fall. Big Beef and Jetsetter should do well either inside or outside. See this thread: http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=18309 Note that she grows in an area with hot summers, and that she replaces the plastic covers with shade cloth once the weather gets hot. (You could simply cover the plastic with shade cloth if you do not want to remove it, and open the ends and/or sides.) If you want to do the hot-bed seed-starting method but lack horse manure, you can mix the cow and sheep manure with straw to make it more like horse manure. Its purpose is simply to provide heat of decomposition, and for that it needs the air space that horse manure naturally has and that mixed in straw will provide to cow and/or sheep manure. I would not worry about exact proportions. edit: General guide to fertilizing with manure: http://cru.cahe.wsu.edu/CEPublicatio...33/pnw0533.pdf (This might have the timing you were looking for. Lacking better information, I would guess that amending the soil with it six weeks before plantout should be plenty for fresh manure.)
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February 2, 2013 | #4 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 4,488
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It is not too late to incorporate compost. In fact it will help a lot.
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Scott AKA The Redbaron "Permaculture is a philosophy of working with, rather than against nature; of protracted & thoughtful observation rather than protracted & thoughtless labour; & of looking at plants & animals in all their functions, rather than treating any area as a single-product system." Bill Mollison co-founder of permaculture |
February 2, 2013 | #5 | |||
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Romania - Vaslui County
Posts: 11
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Thanks for your replys.
Well, their goals is to choose a performant variety, witch makes beautiful fruits(bright/intense red), alot of them, starting early and ending very late, witch aren`t squishy, and can be stored for longer. This happens to be my goals too. Quote:
So, what spacing do you suggest? Quote:
I`ve seen some brown stems; don`t know yet what was that about, but they had little to no water, high tems. I know it`s most important to know the diseases in your garden, but I`m overwhelmed with everything, and I don`t know where to begin to discover them; I didn`t pay any attention last year; I`ll take notes this year. Quote:
The proportions in the first post are a bit wrong; either 25% sand, or adjust the other ones, maintaining a 10% ratio for sand. |
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February 2, 2013 | #6 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Romania - Vaslui County
Posts: 11
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Thank you all for taking the time to reply. |
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February 2, 2013 | #7 | |||
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Durhamville,NY
Posts: 2,706
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http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=26382. Also ask the question in the general discussion area. Quote:
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February 3, 2013 | #8 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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One problem that we have been having in the US with manure
is contamination with aminopyralid (and other broadleaf herbicides used by hay farmers that are not digested by animals and end up in their manure). These chemicals can interfere with tomatoes and other vegetables at very low concentrations and take years to break down in the soil. I do not know if you have the problem in Romania, because I do not know if herbicides containing those chemicals are sold there, and if they are do farmers use them. This is a method for testing manure or compost with pea plants to see if it is contaminated. Takes 2-3 weeks: http://whatcom.wsu.edu/ag/aminopyralid/bioassay.html Some pictures of plants grown in contaminated soil: http://whatcom.wsu.edu/ag/aminopyralid/ Row spacing: If you are growing single stem plants on strings, you can go 4 feet between rows and 16 inches between plants in the row. If you are growing multi-stem plants, figure 6-7 feet between rows and a pace between plants in the row. The wider row spacing is appropriate for field tomatoes. (You need room to work between rows. Pruning, trimming, inspecting for insects and disease, harvesting, etc. Better air flow reduces fungus disease pressure, too.)
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February 3, 2013 | #9 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Romania - Vaslui County
Posts: 11
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thank you dice, and Doug9345.
I`m fairly sure I won`t have a problem with manure contamination(herbicides aren`t that popular in my area .. yet(well .. my source doesn`t use any). I`ll have to buy the seeds very soon, .. this is the most important task at the moment ...; any ideas? anyone? Maybe I`ve asked to much ... in one tread .... and people don`t care to write that much ...; let`s make this the only question for now. I must admit that I`m waiting for carolyn137`s reply most, but also from anyone! What would you do, what variety would you choose? (copy-paste from above: "a performant variety, which makes beautiful fruits(bright/intense red), alot of them, starting early and ending very late, which aren`t squishy, and can be stored for longer." )(A greenhouse/polytunnel(maybe more appropriate) variety). I`ll appreciate any thoughts from anyone. |
February 3, 2013 | #10 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Durhamville,NY
Posts: 2,706
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I guess the question I have is what seed is available to you. I don't know if you can import seed easily into Romania or are basically have to use with what the local seed vendor has. I'm going to bring part of your first post down here so that people may see it.
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February 4, 2013 | #11 | ||
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Romania - Vaslui County
Posts: 11
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These are the most widely available: alvaro f1 bss 714 tolstoi f1 tourist f1 cristal f1 tamaris f1 florenzia f1 lorely f1 cetia f1 kartier f1 leonora f1 byzance f1 kilio f1 aphen f1 jairo f1 avatar f1 tol 9326 f1 falcato f1 zfw 738 f1 matias f1 klass f1 naysika f1 noralee f1 Cindel F1 Fado F1 Halay 344 F1 Aegean F1 Belle F1 Buran F1 Elpida F1 Rally F1 Berberana F1 Arbason F1 Velocity F1 Mondial F1 Monroe F1 Vernal F1 Belfast F1 Benatar F1 Amaneta F1 corleone f1 H 11 F1 Cherokee F1 Noemy F1 Margarita F1 Brillante F1 Winona F1 Electra F1 Belladona F1 Primadona F1 Tracie F1 Francesca F1 Avangelina F1 Ismini F1 Marylu F1 Lissete F1 Kanpuku F1 Menhir F1 Axiom F1 Danubiana F1 Gaheris RZ F1 Petula RZ F1 Abellus RZ F1 Lilos RZ F1 Clarabella RZ F1 Cinto RZ F1 Barbados RZ F1 Amerigo F1 Caboto F1 Pink Rise F1 Fuji Pink F1 Meryva F1 Panormus F1 Linares F1 Manyla F1 Bigram F1 Byelsa F1 Venezia F1 Arletta F1 Kiveli F1 Sympathie F1 Marfa F1 Marissa F1 Enygma F1 Optima F1 Big Beef F1 Hilario F1 Bostina F1 Delfine F1 Izmir F1 Panekra F1 Fantastina F1 Comay F1 Gordo Tyl F1 Emir F1 Montfavet F1 Opera F1 Jadelo F1 Charanda F1 Amanda F1 Lady Rosa F1 Rosaliya F1 Mercedes F1 (Shirley F1) Tolin F1 Kilates F1 Lugas F1 Sampei F1 Corfu F1 Alfred F1 .. and some more. I could only find info (and not enough) for some .. . Quote:
PS: As for seeding mix, I wasn`t sure what is accepted, and while searching, found this: https://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/viewhtml.php?id=47 (alot of recipes at the end) So .. I`ll mix what I can find ... and that`s that |
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February 4, 2013 | #12 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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Of your whole list of tomato seed available, Big Beef F1 is
the only one I have heard of (mostly good things about robustness of the plant and production). I do not really care about "squishy" (juicy), because almost every tomato I grow is like that, juicy with plenty of seeds. From your first list, Super Marmande may do well outside in the field. It is a fairly tough cultivar that stands up to bad weather better than most for me. I do not have anything close to your temperatures, though, and it is a juicy, oblate slicer.
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February 6, 2013 | #13 |
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Upstate NY, zone 4b/5a
Posts: 21,169
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I don't usually read the Market Garden Forum, but someone told me that you'd mentioned my name here.
I read through quickly and while you have a list of varieties in one of your first posts, and I am famiiar with many of them, when asked what seeds are available to you, you gave a long list of F1 hybrids and only Big Beef, which I've not grown is famiiar to me. So if you have the seeds for the varieties you first posted, which ones do you want to sell fruits from and which ones for plants and maybe the same varieties for both plants and fruits? You asked the question if you'd asked too much in one thread and yes, I think you might have. Carolyn
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Carolyn |
February 7, 2013 | #14 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Romania - Vaslui County
Posts: 11
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Well .. after some google-ing, I`ll choose between:
Arbason F1 Belle F1 Aegean F1 Brillante F1 (I won`t do plant selling .. so only for produce). I bought big beef seeds from tomatogrowers, so this one will be for sure; any ideas on the other ones? (Arbason f1 seems very good(also much cheaper here, ~45$ for 500sds !), but one review from johnny seeds said that in high temperatures it develops white core ...; on the producer`s website, it says that is good for southern US... . What do you think? ) Edit: in that review , about white core, the man said there were no problems with K nutrient; it seems there are a few more causes for this ...; he stated he`s a profesional grower ... . Last edited by va.0488; February 7, 2013 at 03:43 AM. |
February 7, 2013 | #15 |
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Upstate NY, zone 4b/5a
Posts: 21,169
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I bought big beef seeds from tomatogrowers, so this one will be for sure; any ideas on the other ones?
%%%%% Do you mean the ones that are non-hybrids on your first list? I can't help with the F1 hybrids you just listed above b'c I haven't grown any of them and to be honest most of them on your longer list of F1's are new names for me. Carolyn
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Carolyn |
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