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Old August 4, 2006   #1
greggf
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Default please recommend thin-skinned toms?

I know that skin thickness can be weather-related and variety-related. Are there any other variables that can produce nasty thick skins?

Also, can anybody recommend varieties that are inevitably thin-skinned year after year, regardless of the weather, etc.?

For whatever reason, every variety up here has industrial-strength skin this season........even varieties that have been fine in the past.

=gregg=
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Old August 5, 2006   #2
jerseyjohn61
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Brandywine as in all pinks, Aunt Ginny's Purple,
Mortgage Lifter, to me, are all, get to em' before
they get runny types. Thin skinned and short
keepers. Fantastic, but gather and eat your
rosebuds while yee may.........jj61
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Old August 5, 2006   #3
landarc
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I hope somebody knows for sure, but, I seem to get thick skinned maters when I water too much during fruit development.
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Lets see...$10 for Worth and $5 for Fusion, man. Tomatoes are expensive!

Bob
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Old August 5, 2006   #4
greggf
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We have indeed been getting tropical rainfall amounts all season, during fruit formation. So that looks implicated. Hopefully somebody will know if that is a cause of the problem.

=gregg=
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Old August 5, 2006   #5
montanamato
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St. Pierre always has very thin skin. Likes cool weather and hot, and is good sized. Everyone I have ever gave, sold or bartered with on this seedling always wants it again the next year.

Sources I know of are Baker Creek and Sand Hill
Jeanne
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Old August 5, 2006   #6
jcarter
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My favourite is Dufresne (aka Dufresne #2, they are the same). Disegard the "neutral" rating on Dave's Garden Web. This is a great tasting, pink tomato that I think deserves far more attention than it has been getting. Like you, I prefer thin skinned tomatoes. Unfortunately, it is a late season tomato (80 days rings a bell).
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