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TOMATO GROWING THREAD 2020

Discussion in 'Edible Gardening' started by ARMANDII, Jan 18, 2020.

  1. pete

    pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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    I dont exactly grow toms organically, but I do grow them outside and hard, rarely feed and only water in drought situations.
    I agree the way you grow has a big bearing on the taste.:smile:
     
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    • Aldo

      Aldo Super Gardener

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      The wind decapitated the tip one of my toms, but it has another stem which survived. Perhaps it is not an entirely bad thing either, given it has probably too many upper trusses and now it will have more resources to divert there..

      As for the rest, the tomatoes are one thing which is doing generally quite well despite of excessive cramming. They do not seem to mind to be close to the blackberries, I guess that help pollination a lot. The taste has improved a bit, courtesy of the sunny weather, and the blight has yet to show up, fingers crossed.

      I am trying desperately to find someone to give my spare plants to, but it seems that everybody is planning holidays right now, so not much luck.

      IMG_20200730_175452.jpg

      IMG_20200730_175351.jpg


      IMG_20200730_175341.jpg


      The honeycomb toms are finally starting to ripen, they have been quite slow, and probably will need some snipping in 4-6 weeks to finish working on the top trusses.

      IMG_20200728_201609.jpg
       
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      • Fat Controller

        Fat Controller 'Cuddly' Scottish Admin! Staff Member

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        I've still not had a ripe one yet :sad: Got a few that are changing colour, but still not there. I have a feeling this may also be a chutney year...
         
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        • ThePlantAssassin

          ThePlantAssassin Gardener

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          Im going to pick my first Sungold tomorrow. Just one ready at the moment. Quite a few trusses showing but it seems very late to me. Im sure I was picking much earlier last year. Im growing 2 varieties Sungold and Piccolo and the Piccolo are even further behind. Both in pots but in a very hot sunny sheltered corner. Being in Eastbourne (supposedly the suntrap of the South) I expected fruits earlier.
           
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          • pete

            pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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            Toms ripen well into October, and it doesn't happen often, but I've picked outdoor ones in november before now.
             
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            • Vince

              Vince Not so well known for it.

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              Letting most of my toms do their own thing this year,(JWK's gardeners delight excluded). I'm just side shooting them and throwing some water at them, they don't seem to mind, I've got loads of fruit which I'll have to wait for because I was so late starting.
               
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              • Aldo

                Aldo Super Gardener

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                The toms look reasonably happy, the top trusses are still very much green and developing, but there is plenty of time. However, some at the bottom seem to get overly ripe, so I lured the kid into the garden to pick some and compare notes.
                We tried mainly these ones, in the back garden.

                IMG_20200802_174805.jpg IMG_20200802_174913.jpg IMG_20200802_174929.jpg



                The taste for the Aviditas has improved considerably since a few weeks ago and the Honey are most definitely a keeper, albeit slow at ripening.

                Lizzano are a partial disappointment however, the taste varied from really good to absolutely rubbish, dependently on the plant. I have noticed variability for Lizzano over the last two years, but I thought that giving them all plenty of soil would even things out.
                In reality, I think the main variable is insolation instead, and possibly air circulation. Some have been growing too bushy and I misjudged how much sun the plants around would steal once fully grown. Me and my cramming tendencies..

                Anyway, I am not keen on trimming tomatoes, but in this case I think there is nothing to loose by giving it a go, along with staking the single branches to expose them more.
                I have kept the fruits from the 'bad plants' (poor plants) separated (left ones), because frankly they are pretty bad and I would not wish anybody to pick one of those by mistake :nonofinger:
                I might make some spicy sauce with the evil ones or simply discard them.
                The others are pretty good though..

                IMG_20200803_235323 (2).jpg
                 
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                  Last edited: Aug 4, 2020
                • Scrungee

                  Scrungee Well known for it

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                    Last edited: Aug 4, 2020
                  • Susieshoe

                    Susieshoe Gardener

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                    Picking at last! So slow this year compared to previous years. But lots are now turning and a pretty good crop. These are Nagina Plum and Crimson Crush C526894D-EC43-4A50-8A44-D3C30A856A3C.jpeg
                     
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                    • john558

                      john558 Total Gardener

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                      Yummy with cheese in a sandwich.
                       
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                      • strongylodon

                        strongylodon Old Member

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                        Fourth trusses of Sungold are ripening, too many for us so I have to keep giving them to our neighbour but I get cucumbers in return.:smile:
                         
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                        • JWK

                          JWK Gardener Staff Member

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                          Hi @strongylodon apologies for the delay in replying, have been away for a couple of weeks and still haven't fully caught up yet.

                          I am sorry that your Floridity, Sungold and Gardener's Delight are performing badly. I feel guilty as I recommended these if I recall. My Floridity have been OK this year, they are much firmer than other varieties certainly not as juicy, I like that but it sounds like you don't. I have been growing Floridity ever since it came out top on the RHS taste test trial with the chef Raymond Blanc on the judging panel.

                          Did I send you seed of the Gardener's Delight? As sandymac says the seed packets sold now and those plants available in garden centers are bland, we had a trial on here a few years back comparing modern strains against older ones. Scrungee found a packet of seeds dating back to 2005. These proved to have all the full lovely tangy taste. I grew these on and saved seed, I sent them out to a few members and as far as I know no-one else thinks they are bland. Sorry it's too late to be telling you this now !

                          So all three above varieties I am growing this year have produced well and are very tasty. I have to agree with sandymac's post about the B&Q compost, it would be the common factor as I have never heard of Sungold failing to please anyone. I have a different growing regime to sandy, I grow them in garden soil in the greenhouse and just feed with comfrey tea. I am not so keen on using artificial feeds like tomorite as in my experience the fruit is bland as it is more or less duplicating how the commercial growers do it for the supermarkets. The best alternative would be a seaweed feed rather than tomorite.
                           
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                          • JWK

                            JWK Gardener Staff Member

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                            @TwistedLeaves Hmmm that does look a bit like blight, are they still the same or getting worse?
                             
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                            • JWK

                              JWK Gardener Staff Member

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                              Took these photos a few days ago and only just got around to posting:

                              In the greenhouse:
                              20200729_082852.jpg

                              Gardener's Delight:
                              20200729_082811.jpg

                              All my varieties are ripened now, the bigger ones only just
                              20200802_175053.jpg
                               
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                              • Scrungee

                                Scrungee Well known for it

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                                Gotcha!

                                IMG_20200805_102348682_HDR.jpg

                                B&Q Verve compost is the worst stuff I ever tried. Tomatoes just sat sulking in it and did not extend their roots into it.
                                 
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