Member discussion regarding the methods, varieties and merits of growing tomatoes.
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February 18, 2013 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Huntsville AL
Posts: 91
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Hand, open pollination?
Ok, I've searched everywhere, and can't find a reasonable answer. I notice the idea of open pollination is popular. If there are a number of pollen donors, wouldn't it be similar to open pollination?
What's with Organic seed? Here's another label. Organic or Organically grown vegetables I can see. If you fell in love, but the love interest was raised eating red meat, and hasn't for years, would that be some reason to stop associating? Why're the labels OP or Organic important? Some species simply couldn't reliably be open pollinated, like corn. I realize corn can be reliably pollinated if there's enough distance or time between different bloomings of different cultivars, but here in TN, I don't see much of a possibility of that. |
February 18, 2013 | #2 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Durhamville,NY
Posts: 2,706
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I'll answer about open pollinated. Open pollinated generally means that the variety's off spring will be the same as the parents if the seed is saved from a plant that has been pollinated by itself or another plant of the same variety.
Take squash for example. Even though I'll have to tape blossoms closed and hand pollinate if I'm growing more than one variety of a species and want to keep the variety pure, it is still open pollinated. As long as I pollinate Table King acorn with Table King Acorn the seed I'll produce is Table King and not a hybrid. The management practices that I have to use are independent of the fact that if I only have one variety it will breed true. Buying organically grow seed is more about using your money to vote for methods you believe in than anything else. Corn can be done. Glenn of Sand Hill Preservation manages to list about 150 varieties that are open pollinated. Read here how he does it. http://www.sandhillpreservation.com/catalog/corn.html |
February 18, 2013 | #3 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Huntsville AL
Posts: 91
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Thank You!
That helps to clear things up. I was wondering how I was going to keep pure varieties with the confused way I get things done. Like while I was writing this I hit the wrong button. Now you're reading an edit. OP is then more of an abstract? Last edited by CapnChkn; February 18, 2013 at 11:15 PM. Reason: Posted before I was ready. |
February 18, 2013 | #4 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Durhamville,NY
Posts: 2,706
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Was the egg plant ripe enough for seed saving? They turn a sort of brown-yellow when ripe enough for seed saving.
Look at the picture in post #4 http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=4159 Last edited by Doug9345; February 19, 2013 at 08:25 AM. |
February 18, 2013 | #5 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Huntsville AL
Posts: 91
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Bonk!
Yessir Doug! I done left that sucker on there an wouldn't let nobody pick it until the frost wuz bout to come. It wasn't really yellow, more of a dull yellow gray. I am looking at one seed right now that has a root tip coming out the bottom. Here's what Doug was responding to all... Quote:
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February 19, 2013 | #6 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Durhamville,NY
Posts: 2,706
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My Black Beauty took 7 and 8 day's last year at 85ºF.
Here's what my five eggplant did last year. Casper was significantly slower than the others. I can't get it to format so I'm attaching it as a screen shot. |
February 19, 2013 | #7 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Huntsville AL
Posts: 91
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I have the grow box here in my bedroom, the seedlings get moved out to the cold frame when they get true leaves. I planted the seeds I harvested last year weeks ago, in spent worm castings.
This year I decided I wanted more control, so added the paper towel system. I didn't mark the date I put the eggplant seed in the towel, but it's showing something while the paper pots in the grow box are not. 10 pots, nothing for weeks / paper towel, 1 or 2 weeks and I'm seeing some roots. I need to set up some record keeping I guess. Is that a spreadsheet? Now as to the Open Pollination, is there some kind of guideline where this is defined? Are there any rules by organic growers or otherwise? It seems too loose a definition. Or is this like calling Rape, "Canola" for a marketing purpose? |
February 19, 2013 | #8 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Durhamville,NY
Posts: 2,706
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Yes it is. Actually it's a few lines from a spreadsheet that has 8 or 10 pages and a hundred lines or more per page. I dont really have harvest data from last year because health and weather over whelmed me last year. I use open office for spreadsheet and word processing. The project has split into Open Office and Libre office. The difference has to with things internal to the project.
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February 20, 2013 | #9 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Huntsville AL
Posts: 91
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Ok. I use Ubuntu, and Libreoffice is loaded in the package.
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February 20, 2013 | #10 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Durhamville,NY
Posts: 2,706
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The way I keep back ups of it is to email it to a yahoo address I have. That way is my computer goes down I still know where stuff is planted. I also save it at times both in excel format so that someone with excel could open it and even export it as a pdf so that I could always go to the library and print it out if I had to.
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February 22, 2013 | #11 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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"open pollenated" (or "open pollinated") does not denote the method
of pollenation, which can be self pollenated, wind pollenated, bee pollenated, manually pollenated, or whatever. It denotes a genetic difference between genetically unstable (across generations) hybrids and genetically stable "open pollenated" cultivars, which will produce the same combination of genes over and over in the saved seeds if the plants self pollenate. Hybrids will not do that. When a hybrid self-pollenates and you save seeds, you get a fanout of different combinations of genes in plants of the next generation. The plant and fruit that each combination of genes produces will tend to be different both from the parent hybrid and from each other.
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February 22, 2013 | #12 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Huntsville AL
Posts: 91
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I see. So what you're saying is "Open Pollinated" are not candidates for hybrid, and vice-versa. That kind of makes OP/Heirloom redundant doesn't it? Thank you, that makes pollinating seeds a whole lot easier.
Doug, that works. Do you have the spreadsheet? Formulas, dates and template, not the data? I use Libreoffice Calc to run spreadsheets for farm expenses and Market sales. I usually use a flash drive to backup, if I don't send it to another computer or the NAS. If you download the Teamviewer software, you can actually run the other computer from the first. It requires a password, the software to be installed on both computers, Internet connection, and if you just want to connect using the LAN, you need to specify that in the options. |
February 22, 2013 | #13 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Durhamville,NY
Posts: 2,706
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Quote:
Another example is all the tomatoes that are release out of the dwarf project are open pollinated, none of them are heirlooms. With that all said there are many that use the term heirloom incorrectly. |
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February 22, 2013 | #14 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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You can take two open-pollenated cultivars and make a new
hybrid. If you grow out and select the best over several years, insuring that they do not cross again with anything else and saving seeds, you will eventually arrive at a new open-pollenated variety. This document explains the genetics of stabilization of open-pollenated cultivars that were once hybrids (be sure to continue to the next page until the end): http://kdcomm.net/~tomato/gene/genes.html
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-- alias Last edited by dice; February 22, 2013 at 06:59 PM. Reason: clarity |
February 23, 2013 | #15 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Huntsville AL
Posts: 91
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¡Que Bueno! That's what the original question is. I have Rutgers, I see people advertising their Rutgers as "heirloom." As I remember, Rutgers was developed for commercial use. There are people talking about saving their commercial seed, carrying the line, and "now" it's an heirloom!
I, a frustrated wordsmith, have all kinds of trouble with people mixing genre. Either out of laziness, or ignorance. I pass this wisdom on, and feel cheated when I find out it's totally wrong. |
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