Tomato Growing Thread 2022

Discussion in 'Edible Gardening' started by JWK, Jan 1, 2022.

  1. JWK

    JWK Gardener Staff Member

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    They will produce sideshoots if there are true leaves. You can encourage one to become the main stem.
     
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    • eatenbyweasels

      eatenbyweasels Messy Gardener

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      Yes, plenty of time to recover; I usually grow as double cordons anyway.
       
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      • Glynne Williams

        Glynne Williams Keen Gardener

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        Is a tomato specialist someone who sows seeds VERY early, and lots of varieties?
         
      • Aldo

        Aldo Super Gardener

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        Hi everybody :)
        I have a question..
        Do early blight spores survive over winter?
        I am asking because while we were away last August, the blight obliterated each and every tomato plant in our back garden. I guess the wind spread the spores so all plants in a 30 meters radius or so were affected very badly.

        Because it did not seem to affect anything else, and I felt a bit discouraged, I just left them all there, but now it is time for me to clear it all up and get things ready for planting more in the summer.
        I am wondering if I should remove the top soil and any soil affected by the roots, and if I should be wary of reusing the same canes from last year.
        Sorry, probably it is a bit of dumb question, but it never happened to me before.
        Fortunatley I had half a dozen plants on the front so not everything was lost (I had considered not planting any in the front, for once I am glad about my compulsive cramming habit).
        Thanks for any advice!

        By the way, this what it looked like. All the othe plants were just the same.
        Am I correct assuming it was early blight?

        upload_2022-3-28_14-57-33.png upload_2022-3-28_14-56-17.png upload_2022-3-28_14-57-33.png upload_2022-3-28_14-56-17.png
        [​IMG]
         
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        • pete

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

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          Just my own thoughts but I dont think you can actually eradicate the spores, there will always be some somewhere.
          So I would definitely get rid of any nasty looking material lying around and if you want to disinfect the area with jayes fluid it wont hurt, but I think whatever you do, if conditions are right the blight will be back.
           
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          • Balc

            Balc Total Gardener

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            Though blight cannot be eliminated if you keep the leaves as dry as you possibly can that will go a long way to avoiding blight attacks in the future.

            I've been gardening on a balcony for over 20 years & in all that time I've only had blight once - that was probably my fault as at the time I had an allotment & ALL my plants looked exactly the same as yours! :( I cleared them all away but I probably went out on to the balcony wearing the same clothes I had been wearing on the allotment. Unknowingly I must have spread the spores to the tomatoes on the balcony).

            I remember reading somewhere that blight spores need a wet surface on which to germinate (or whatever the process of growing is called) so as my plants are always sheltered from any rain they never get wet & therefore blight cannot get a hold on them.

            Hope this will be of some help to you. :)
            .
            Tomatoes 'F1 'Rugby' Seen from outside  12th August 2021 001.jpg Tomatoes 'F1 'Rugby' Seen from outside  12th August 2021 002.jpg
             
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            • Balc

              Balc Total Gardener

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              Try 'Gardeners Delight' They taste like tomatoes used to taste like - seems centuries ago! :)
               
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              • JWK

                JWK Gardener Staff Member

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                @Aldo yes that is Blight, late blight not early. Such as shame you lost your crop just as it was coming good. The spores survive in plant material over-winter so get rid of as much as possible. Don't compost them as that will be trouble in the future. Give it all a good clean as pete says. If you have any potatoes in the garden they suffer the same disease and so remove any volunteers as they are a likely source of re-infection this year.

                Good tip about watering from Balc. I try and use only mains water rather than collected rain water from butts as I think that might contain the blight spores. However that didn't work for me last year as I too had blight, within my greenhouse so am in the same boat as you. I am not going to remove all the soil and replace with fresh. Instead I'm growing mostly blight resistant varieties. The variety Honey Moon I grew last year really did well and was hardly affected. I am going to grow in compost bags to keep the roots away from any infection in my soil.

                I have tried to round up all the blight resistant varieties, I hope to find a few more that taste good out this bunch:
                Blight Resistant Tomatoes
                 
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                • Hanglow

                  Hanglow Super Gardener

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                  Transplanted 42 tomato seedlings today and sowed some aurora, crimson crush and banan krasnyi for attempting to grow outside. I'll also try growing some of the earlier sown ones outside as I have nowhere near enough space undercover for 42 plants
                   
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                  • Balc

                    Balc Total Gardener

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                    My tomato seedlings are doing alright outside on the balcony table but from tonight, & perhaps for the coming week, I shall have to bring them in at night as we are forecast possible frosts. :sad:
                     
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                    • eatenbyweasels

                      eatenbyweasels Messy Gardener

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                      Been away in Edinburgh for three nights. My friend in the next village agreed to foster my smaller toms/seedlings. Unfortunately one tray of four pots took a tumble, throwing at least one newly emerged seedling out of its pot and now I have a game of "guess the variety".
                       
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                      • eatenbyweasels

                        eatenbyweasels Messy Gardener

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                        Re-sowed the varieties that were in the spilled pots. Also a dozen 2010 Gardener's Delight seeds and the last two of JWK's 2005 strain. Fingers crossed.

                        You'll all be relieved to know that the traumatically pruned Piglet Willie's French Black is out of Intensive Care, having pushed out a couple of decent side shoots.
                         
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                        • Paul waterhouse

                          Paul waterhouse Apprentice Gardener

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                          I've sown my gardeners delight a week ago. The are sat in the conservatory. Am I little bit late to the party. I know they aren't going to planted out till well after last frost.....who knows when that will be. I've never grown Tom's outdoors before, I've never actually grown Tom's at all.
                           
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                          • JWK

                            JWK Gardener Staff Member

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                            That should be ok Paul, I usually wait till now to sow my outdoor tomatoes.
                             
                          • pete

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

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                            If you have never grown Toms before Paul, and you are growing outside, it might have been better to have gone for a blight resistant variety, only if blight does strike, and I hope in your case it doesn't, it can be enough to put you off growing toms for good.:smile:
                             
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