So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

Everything About Tomatoes
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karstopography
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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#401

Post: # 109603Unread post karstopography
Mon Nov 06, 2023 7:06 pm

PlainJane wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 6:39 pm That’s amazing @karstopography!
Idk, there’s something about counting chickens before they hatch that comes to mind. Winter tomatoes were a revelation in inner city Houston once upon a time, but in spite of being closer to the relatively warm Gulf of Mexico here I don’t have the benefit of millions of people and many thousands of buildings throwing off enough ambient heat to be an open air greenhouse like it was.

Microclimates are real and meaningful as far as tomatoes are concerned.
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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#402

Post: # 109635Unread post Wildcat82
Tue Nov 07, 2023 10:42 am

karstopography wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 7:06 pm
PlainJane wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 6:39 pm That’s amazing @karstopography!
Idk, there’s something about counting chickens before they hatch that comes to mind. Winter tomatoes were a revelation in inner city Houston once upon a time, but in spite of being closer to the relatively warm Gulf of Mexico here I don’t have the benefit of millions of people and many thousands of buildings throwing off enough ambient heat to be an open air greenhouse like it was.

Microclimates are real and meaningful as far as tomatoes are concerned.
Not just microclimates but also soil type and disease/pest problems can be amazingly local.

At out old residence, there was zero soil, just caliche. Then 7-8 miles away was a cornfield.

Mites absolutely wipe out my strawberries literally days after they pop up, and yet, 20 miles away from my house, the commercial Poteet strawberry farmers have never had mites bother their strawberry fields at all.

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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#403

Post: # 110723Unread post karstopography
Sat Nov 25, 2023 1:35 pm

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Bella Rosa still going strong. No sign of disease. The fruit are well formed and growing. Cooler than normal November weather apparently not a deal breaker with these tomatoes, but still got a long way to go.
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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#404

Post: # 110732Unread post PlainJane
Sat Nov 25, 2023 4:56 pm

That’s just amazing @karstopography!
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Harry Cabluck
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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#405

Post: # 110818Unread post Harry Cabluck
Mon Nov 27, 2023 7:10 pm

Will soon set up the seed-starting station in the house. Much easier to control the temperature here than out in the garage. Would like to acquire two-dozen Maxifort rootstock seeds, but unable to find seedsman willing to sell such a few. Anticipating an early spring, due to global warming and will sow seeds two-weeks earlier than normal. Wishing everyone a healthy and happy holiday season. And a successful 2024 growing season.
Refrain from calculating the total number of poultry...before the process of incubation has fully materialized.

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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#406

Post: # 110819Unread post karstopography
Mon Nov 27, 2023 8:27 pm

Austin went from 8b to 9a on the new 2023 Hardiness zone map. I was in Austin recently and am amazed how much Austin has grown. Don’t discount the increased Urban Heat Island effect of a greatly enlarged city. I would imagine being zone 9a and being more or less inner city your last freeze date would be mid February, at the very latest. The link from 2019 has the date At February 15th, moved back from February 25th.

https://www.kxan.com/weather/weather-bl ... edia%20Inc.

I start my tomatoes here in 9b on the coast around January 1st or that first week of January for transplanting around February 15th to February 25th. Our last freeze is February 15th. I don’t have any benefit from being in a large urban area and being semi-rural risk frosts that my friend in town a couple miles away doesn’t get.
"No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth, and no culture comparable to that of the garden."
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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#407

Post: # 111262Unread post Harry Cabluck
Tue Dec 05, 2023 5:54 pm

!Karstop! Wishing you great seed-starting (and no dampoff) with a successful 2024 season. Received this year's supply of Maxifort rootstock seed a few days ago. Will start heirloom seeds around Christmas this year. Rootstock seeds to be sown around Jan. 1.
Refrain from calculating the total number of poultry...before the process of incubation has fully materialized.

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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#408

Post: # 111264Unread post karstopography
Tue Dec 05, 2023 8:16 pm

Harry Cabluck wrote: Tue Dec 05, 2023 5:54 pm !Karstop! Wishing you great seed-starting (and no dampoff) with a successful 2024 season. Received this year's supply of Maxifort rootstock seed a few days ago. Will start heirloom seeds around Christmas this year. Rootstock seeds to be sown around Jan. 1.
Absolutely, let’s hope 2024 is good for both of us. I still don’t know exactly what I will end up growing, sort of an embarrassment of riches as far as seed goes. My schedule isn’t all that different from yours, I might start my tomatoes January 1st before the game.
"No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth, and no culture comparable to that of the garden."
Thomas Jefferson

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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#409

Post: # 111870Unread post karstopography
Sat Dec 16, 2023 10:30 am

FullSizeRender.jpeg
Does not appear I’ll be getting ripe tomatoes for Christmas. I’m shooting for the New Year’s Day now. Biggest tomato on the sole Bella Rosa plant might be six ounces or so. All the fruit look clean and the only issue is where they might have rubbed against the bamboo stake.

We have a relatively warm week ahead and I have noticed the tomatoes put on weight during the warmer weather. The plant itself remains healthy and there’s zero pests to contend with.
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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#410

Post: # 111897Unread post Wildcat82
Sat Dec 16, 2023 10:09 pm

karstopography wrote: Sat Dec 16, 2023 10:30 am FullSizeRender.jpeg

Does not appear I’ll be getting ripe tomatoes for Christmas. I’m shooting for the New Year’s Day now. Biggest tomato on the sole Bella Rosa plant might be six ounces or so. All the fruit look clean and the only issue is where they might have rubbed against the bamboo stake.

We have a relatively warm week ahead and I have noticed the tomatoes put on weight during the warmer weather. The plant itself remains healthy and there’s zero pests to contend with.
I'm curious how your tomatoes come out taste-wise. Without a lot of sun/warmer temperatures my slicers seem to turn out mealy and the cherries lack flavor. The Sungolds I have are about the only variety I've grow that seem to really keep their flavor. Your Bella Rosa does look really nice. Fingers crossed that the sun comes out for us the next couple weeks.

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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#411

Post: # 112562Unread post karstopography
Fri Dec 29, 2023 10:21 am

IMG_3025.jpeg
First draft of my 2024 tomato seed starts. Might, likely, will edit it down to 18 from the current 24. Estimated time of seed starting is January 7th.
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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#412

Post: # 112579Unread post karstopography
Fri Dec 29, 2023 1:45 pm

As of now, I’m planning on cutting out Great White, Kellogg’s Breakfast, Domingo, Pineapple, BLT, and Bear Creek.

That will leave me four small roma/paste types for dehydration/sauces/fresh eating, then one large yellow/orange, one anthro/white, six large pink, one bicolor, two red, and three dark for a total of 18.
"No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth, and no culture comparable to that of the garden."
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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#413

Post: # 113054Unread post karstopography
Sat Jan 06, 2024 2:27 pm

IMG_3068.jpeg
A so it begins. Got my tomatoes started.

Pinks
Missouri Pink Love Apple
Aunt Ginny’s Purple
Brandywine Cowlick’s
Pruden’s Purple
Barlow’s Jap
Dester
Hoy
Giant Belgium

Reds
Aker’s West Virginia
Cuostralee
Red Barn
Aussie
Beefmaster (hybrid)

Dark
Japanese Black Trifele
Carbon
Black From Tula
Black Krim

Yellow/Orange/White/Anthro
Dr. Wyche’s Yellow
Sart Roloise

Small fruited Paste/Grape/Cherry
Principe Borghese
A. Grappoli D’ Inverno
Creamsicle Grape
Gardener’s Sweetheart
Pandorino (hybrid)
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Thomas Jefferson

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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#414

Post: # 113066Unread post MissS
Sat Jan 06, 2024 4:14 pm

@karstopography How do the Brandywines perform for you?

I'm surprised to see them on your list because so many people complain about getting only 1-2 fruit when they are growing in the south.
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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#415

Post: # 113079Unread post karstopography
Sat Jan 06, 2024 7:30 pm

MissS wrote: Sat Jan 06, 2024 4:14 pm @karstopography How do the Brandywines perform for you?

I'm surprised to see them on your list because so many people complain about getting only 1-2 fruit when they are growing in the south.
I’m rolling the dice.

I’ve not done any of the true brandywines unless you count True Black Brandywine and Brandywine OTV. I don’t count OTV as a true Brandywine being that OTV is a cross with something else, as I understand it an unknown yellow tomato. Bear Creek also reportedly has a brandywine parent, but nobody calls Bear Creek Brandywine anything. True black brandywine is I’m sure a cross somewhere down the line. All three of those did reasonably well in previous grow outs, not the worst or best as far as production goes. Almost all big slicer types no matter what they are eventually stop setting fruit once the heat settles in.

Seems like B. Cowlick’s, from the things I have read, could have the best shot at working here. Figured I would give it a shot.

My buddy up the road a bit does Red Brandywine every season and has good results and ample fruit, although, it is later to produce than most everything else he grows.
"No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth, and no culture comparable to that of the garden."
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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#416

Post: # 113083Unread post Seven Bends
Sat Jan 06, 2024 8:49 pm

@karstopography, you faked us out with NINE last-minute substitutions! How did you make your final decisions? Looks like a great list; I hope they all turn out amazing for you.

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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#417

Post: # 113084Unread post karstopography
Sat Jan 06, 2024 9:09 pm

Seven Bends wrote: Sat Jan 06, 2024 8:49 pm @karstopography, you faked us out with NINE last-minute substitutions! How did you make your final decisions? Looks like a great list; I hope they all turn out amazing for you.
Is the the number, nine?

I had the first selections in a big zip bag and kind of pondered for several days on what I truly like and what I was curious about and ended up with what I planted. I felt like exploring more into the direction of deeply tomatoey tomatoes, the bigger pink and red types, and backed off from the other less tomatoey colors some.

I also read some older posts from successful growers in hot and humid areas and what big size and flavor open pollinated tomatoes worked in those regions. That’s how Giant Belgium, Aker’s West Virginia, Red Barn, and Barlow Jap got included. I’ve been meaning to grow Missouri Pink Love Apple and decided why not in 2024. Sweet Tooth and some comments I had read about its potential for splitting scared me away from growing it. Splitting tomatoes, tomatoes prone to splitting, are something I try to avoid. Japanese Black Trifele got a late inclusion because I decided I’d miss having it for salsa.
"No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth, and no culture comparable to that of the garden."
Thomas Jefferson

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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#418

Post: # 113085Unread post Seven Bends
Sat Jan 06, 2024 9:16 pm

karstopography wrote: Sat Jan 06, 2024 9:09 pm
Seven Bends wrote: Sat Jan 06, 2024 8:49 pm @karstopography, you faked us out with NINE last-minute substitutions! How did you make your final decisions? Looks like a great list; I hope they all turn out amazing for you.
Is the the number, nine?
Yep. I'm facing a big work deadline and am a skilled procrastinator so I spent some time counting. :oops:

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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#419

Post: # 113427Unread post karstopography
Thu Jan 11, 2024 10:12 am

First tomato to sprout is Pandorino.
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Re: So Texans, Where do you Stand on Tomatoes?

#420

Post: # 113492Unread post karstopography
Fri Jan 12, 2024 9:18 am

20 out of 24 varieties have at least one sprouting seed, most look like multiple seeds are up, 100% of the planted seed. Laggards are Aunt Ginny’s Purple, Cuostralee, Giant Belgium, and Barlow Jap. The last three might be 2018 or 2020 seed, for sure all three are MMMM swap seed. Aunt Ginny’s Purple is TGS commercial seed, but might be from two or three years ago.
"No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth, and no culture comparable to that of the garden."
Thomas Jefferson

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