Tomato Growing Thread 2021

Discussion in 'Edible Gardening' started by JWK, Jan 4, 2021.

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  1. Scrungee

    Scrungee Well known for it

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    Just cut about a barrowload of lower leaves from my polytunnel cherry tomatoes. I'm now more worried about botrytus in there than blight.

    Was going to pick loads, but brought 2 barrow loads of crops back home and still didn't have enough room for them.

    IMG_20210924_162656104_HDR.jpg

    And my beefsteaks are finally ripening!

    IMG_20210924_163235090.jpg

    Got more 'canning' jars coming next week for pasteurizing tomato sauce.
     
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    • Dave W

      Dave W Total Gardener

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      Worst incidence of blight I've ever experienced. On 8th August my outdoor cherry toms were looking great and we'd started picking a few, but 2 weeks later they'd been decimated. My plants in the polytunnel were also hit but not quite so badly.
      In years gone by if I received a blight warning or spotted early signs I'd spray with bordeaux mixture (copper), but use of that is now banned for non-agricultural uses.
       
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      • Fat Controller

        Fat Controller 'Cuddly' Scottish Admin! Staff Member

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        Nice to see you around @Dave W. hope you are well.

        It was the year from hell in terms of blight - not a single edible ripe tomato for me and somewhat frustratingly it was probably my most expensive year as I bought most of my plants as seedlings having not been able to get them going from seed thanks to the weather.
        Currently, I am not sure I will bother next year but am going to sit on it for a few months and contemplate.
         
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        • Scrungee

          Scrungee Well known for it

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          Picked a couple of trays today, one of Orange Paruche and another of Sungolds and Gardeners Delights for saucing.

          IMG_20210925_184529542.jpg

          There should be a massive pick of Suncherries tomorrow, but I'm leaving the Shirlies (about 6 plants) until more canning jars arrive, but may also have some stuffed.

          IMG_20210925_152203353.jpg

          Beefsteaks ripening fast and most should ripen before I have to cut and take indoors.

          Lost 2 plants to botrytus, didn't see it until I removed lots of leaves, just wilting/yellowing leaves. Still no blight undercover or outdoors.
           
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          • WeeTam

            WeeTam Total Gardener

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            More homemade sweet pepper and tomato relish today :stirpot::stirpot::stirpot:...
             
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            • Scrungee

              Scrungee Well known for it

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              Not seen this before :yikes:

              IMG_20210926_064439082.jpg
               
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              • pete

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

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                I've seen that kind of thing before on marmande, but it's usually on the bottom not the side.
                 
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                • Fat Controller

                  Fat Controller 'Cuddly' Scottish Admin! Staff Member

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                  I meant to ask and forgot - is it blight that makes the fruit puff up almost as though they are pressurised with gas?
                   
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                  • Scrungee

                    Scrungee Well known for it

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                    Probably BER. I suspect tomato moth caterpillar might have made a couple of holes in this one that have decayed to form those cavities, but I didn't see any sign of them or their frass.

                    A picking if Suncherries this morning. Left quite a few red ones on the plants as they'll last well where they are.

                    IMG_20210926_094714640.jpg

                    Weather forecast is promising for harvesting polytunnel tomatoes well into October.
                     
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                    • JWK

                      JWK Gardener Staff Member

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                      Blight makes the fruit look black and withered and the stems and leaves will have black areas:
                      [​IMG]

                      Not my image but gives an idea what blight looks like.

                      I'm not sure what is causing yours to puff up, have you got a photo?
                       
                    • JWK

                      JWK Gardener Staff Member

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                      @Fat Controller

                      Another photo I found showing what happens to the fruit within a couple of days, blight destroys the whole plant very quickly:
                      [​IMG]
                       
                    • Fat Controller

                      Fat Controller 'Cuddly' Scottish Admin! Staff Member

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                      Sadly not @JWK - ours definitely had blight, no question of that, but when we got to the last plants I simply gave up with them and left them in situ. A few plants seemed to carry on growing somewhat ironically, but the resulting fruit although they looked OK, felt inflated. I should have taken a photo of them, but to be fair there was not a lot to see, it was more a feel thing. A gentle squeeze had them popping like wee balloons
                       
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                      • JWK

                        JWK Gardener Staff Member

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                        Maybe it was as they were dying and with a bit of sun caused the insides to ferment and expand. Apples do that as damaged windfalls left on the ground.
                         
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                        • Selleri

                          Selleri Koala

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                          Last harvest on it's way to become sauce. We didn't have any blight at all, perhaps we are too up north? We don't do warm and humid in Newcastle :heehee:

                          Poor Teenager kindly cleaned the toms, sadly I had to crop her face out of the photo. Apparently cleaning Mum's toms is not what Teenagers prefer for a Saturday night fun. [​IMG]

                          harvest.jpg sauce.jpg
                           
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                          • pete

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

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                            I've known tomatoes to go like that, they end up just a bag of seeds and juice, the juice is usually very acidic.

                            So I think Johns suggestion of fermentation taking place inside the fruit sounds quite feasible.
                             
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