2016 Tomato Growing

Discussion in 'Edible Gardening' started by JWK, Jan 2, 2016.

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  1. JWK

    JWK Gardener Staff Member

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    Welcome to the forum Tracy, it is rather early to be sowing - most folk wait till mid-march
     
  2. JWK

    JWK Gardener Staff Member

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    Blight is wind-borne so keeping them under glass will provide a bit of protection.

    The main problem with growing outside is getting them to ripen, if your hanging baskets are attached to the house and south facing then that helps (because there will be a little microclimate there, getting warmth from the bricks).
     
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    • MrsTea

      MrsTea Khazâd Ai-Mênu

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      I was planning to put them in our allotment, which is south-facing and has summer from morning to evening as there are no buildings around. We do get some rather hot days in the summer, but you know what the Northeast is like. I think this year it will be trial and error.
       
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      • Tracy_x

        Tracy_x Gardener

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        Thanks
        I started in March last year, end with lots of green one be frozened ..., so will try a little early this year
         
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        • JWK

          JWK Gardener Staff Member

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          I'm going to grow a bed of outdoor tomatoes in my allotment this year too, I'll be trying the variety San Marzano which is an Italian Plum variety, my plan is to stop the plants after 3 trusses to hasten the ripening. Last year I had a few outdoor tomatoes and whilst some were OK others never ripened - so even down south we have trouble too.
           
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          • MrsTea

            MrsTea Khazâd Ai-Mênu

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            Cutting off additional trusses sounds like a good idea. I never considered it, but now that you mention it.. last year I had a few trusses that had lovely ripened tomatoes, others never ripened. I will give this a try, too.

            Another thing learned, thanks! :ideaIPB::)
             
          • Scrungee

            Scrungee Well known for it

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            My list for 2016, 28 varieties:

            Bush
            Micro Tom (mini-bush for indoors)
            Red Alert (very early cropping outdoors, guaranteed that every fruit will ripen before frosts come)
            Brasero (heavier/later cropping)
            Koralik (blight resistant, but a bit bland)
            Tumbler F1 (for containers), Red & Yellow

            Cordon
            Ferline F1 (blight resistant, decent size for stuffing)
            Sweet Million
            Sungold F1 (growing less of these now as they're too prone to splitting and soften/lose flavour too quickly for my liking).
            Mountain Magic F1
            Gardener's Delight
            Suncherry F1 (good for cutting 'tomatoes on the vine')
            Golden Cherry F1
            Shirley F1 (for village show)

            EDIT1: Missed a few from my T&M 'hauls'
            Sungrape F1
            Brutus F1
            Berry F1
            Black Cherry


            EDIT2
            Scotland Yellow & Kenches Gold

            EDIT3 'Heinz' free seeds


            Beafsteak/'Giant'
            Phil's Fantastic
            Ian Neale's UK record tomato strain
            Dan McCoy's World record tomato strain
            Gigantomo (for Vanmeuwen's competition)
            Angelina's Bulgarian
            Ovi's Romanian Giant
            KF's Giant
             
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              Last edited: Apr 3, 2016
            • Fern4

              Fern4 Total Gardener

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              I grow maskotka in hanging baskets and they never fail to produce. You don't need to take out any side shoots either. They just need watering and feeding. Use at least a 14inch basket - I found smaller baskets need watering a lot more. Last year I lined one basket with a mpc bag and put some holes in it. It was just a trial to see if the compost remained more moist through the day. It worked very well as I found the basket did not dry out as much. I also had hardly any fruit cracking. I'll be doing the same this year. :)
               
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              • Fat Controller

                Fat Controller 'Cuddly' Scottish Admin! Staff Member

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                Agreed - Maskotka are scruffy little blighters at times, but they produce well and seem to be almost bomb proof (taste pretty good too)

                @Fern4 - I found my trial of mixing the innards of disposable nappies in along with the compost to be quite successful, and not only with tomatoes; some of my pots and baskets only needed watering every three to four days :blue thumb:
                 
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                • Fern4

                  Fern4 Total Gardener

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                  I wondered how you'd got on with that! May try that myself :dbgrtmb:
                   
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                  • Tracy_x

                    Tracy_x Gardener

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                    This year I will try these on my small garden

                    1 ToLA - Latah Very Early Red Tomato
                    2 Tomato Black Cherry
                    3 Tomato Sungold F1
                     
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                    • JWK

                      JWK Gardener Staff Member

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                      Sowed my Rootstock on Saturday, this morning they have germinated - only taken 3 days.

                      This year I will be mostly growing:
                      Alicanti
                      Black Cherry
                      Floridity
                      Gardening Delight F1 (supposed to be a better selection of Gardener's Delight)
                      Gigantomo (for the biggest tomato competition)
                      Golden Sunrise
                      New Girl F1
                      Orkado F1
                      San Marzano
                      Shirley F1
                      Sungold F1

                      Most of the above will be in my greenhouse and grafted onto rootstock:
                      http://gardenerscorner.co.uk/forum/threads/tomato-grafting.50020/page-4

                      but I also intend to grow a couple of dozen in the allotment of non-grafted Orkado and San Marzano. These will be stopped at the second truss to ensure I get a ripened crop well before the summer is over, before blight hits us and to reduce staking requirements. The outdoor toms are mainly for preserving by drying them or turning them into passata.
                       
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                      • Cinnamon

                        Cinnamon Super Gardener

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                        @fat controller 'innards of disposable nappies'.....for a moment you had me worried!

                        My first batch of tomatoes have germinated nicely, as have my peppers and aubergines.
                         
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                        • Sheal

                          Sheal Total Gardener

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                          I've used the insides of NEW :) disposable nappies in my wall baskets but I avoided using them for tomatoes, not being sure what chemicals may be in them.

                          I can't say whether it worked or not as the basket plants (Begonias, never again!) failed to grow. :doh:I'll be trying something different this year. :)
                           
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                            Last edited: Feb 2, 2016
                          • Tingting44

                            Tingting44 Gardener

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                            ill be growing 2 Praxxus tomato plants in my 1st year garden this year,,,,, can not wait!!! so I'm taking people are starting there seeds now, think ill start mine off on my window seal now, then move them into their final home in the green house in about 5 weeks :)
                             
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