Tuesday, July 7, 2020

First Slicer tomato

Well, this year I got a tomato by the 4th of July, but didn't notice till the 5th. That's when I found these guys hiding:


I'm not so surprised about the cherries, but those are two ripe Cherokee Purples! It's funny, this year I decided was going to be my last year for Cherokee Purple since they've never been very prolific. But shoot, if they are going to produce by the 4th of July, they can stay! No other slicer I have growing is that close to turning red. I have one Gary O'Sena that is threatening to turn pink but that's about it.


Sunday, June 7, 2020

Young vs Old Plants

With no giant tomato contest this year, my gardening interests have turned elsewhere. I'm trying to answer the question of when is the best time to start your tomatoes and peppers indoors. Or perhaps worded differently, does it make sense to start your plants super early?

This year, I started a bunch of plants the day before New Year's Eve. That's ridiculously early. For comparison, I started the same varieties again the second weekend in April. I'm going to grow them under the same conditions to see which does better. Will the old veterans teach the young punks a lesson, or will the young guns outshoot their elders?


Planting day. No question which are the grizzled veterans.


Here are a couple of Stump of the World tomatoes, my favorite variety. I potted up the older plant in early April, around the same time that I planted seeds for the young plant. The New Year's Eve plant went in and out of the garage every day until the weather was warm enough to leave it out. It is covered with greenies (I counted at least 10). But it looks like it is dying. The lower leaves are yellowing and falling off, and the remaining leaves are all curled and drooping. Even the new growth looks distressed. I wonder if there's too much top growth for the roots to support? By contrast, the young plant looks happy as a clam. Will it ever catch up? Will the old plant die before it can produce an early crop?


Here are a couple of Rutgers Select tomatoes, an old-time variety with potentially heavy yields. One year a Rutgers Select produced over 200 tomatoes for me from a single vine. Wow. This old plant was a Charlie Brown Christmas tree vine if there ever was one. I didn't pot it up, but rather kept it in the basement until late May. It lost all of its lower leaves. At one point, I almost threw it in the trash. The vine was about 3' long and I buried the bottom 2' horizontally. Since planting it a couple weeks ago, it has done nothing. I can't see any signs of new growth. Meanwhile, the young seedling has thrived. I expect the young one to easily win this battle.


Here are some old vs young peppers. Not the same variety in this case, but you get the idea. I have young Jimmy Nardiellos going as well, I just didn't get any pictures of them. The old plants have yellow, curled leaves but lots of peppers. Even the new growth looks weak. By contrast, the young plants have almost caught up in size. No peppers, but really nice looking plants. By the end of the season, I predict the young plants will be outproducing the old plants.

Tuesday, August 20, 2019

Here is a good looking tomato...


First almost ripe tomato of the season. A tiny tot at 385g (13.58oz). I've named him Jimmy Durante:




Wednesday, July 10, 2019

New Season, New Aspirations

So it sounds like there is no money on the line this year, but that doesn't mean I don't plan on bringing in a large tomato.  Plants are in the ground and growing well so far.  I have dodged most of the severe weather and hail thus far (knock on wood).

Here's a Big Zac that looks almost too picturesque.


Here is an ugly Domingo.

Here are some potential Big Zac blooms.  Not sure if or when I will cull some of them.

Monday, April 29, 2019

Improving the quality of my sleep

After reading too many Amazon reviews about cheap LED grow lights catching fire, I decided to fuse the AC input to my lights. I hacked a power cord and put a fuse holder in series with the line (hot) wire. The fuse holder is intended for low voltage automotive wiring, so I covered it with shrink tubing to make it safe to touch.


My Viparspectra 300W lights nominally draw 1.14A. I daisy chained 2 together, so that's 2.28A. I figured a 5A fuse should be about right. Here's the final setup:


Thursday, April 18, 2019

Winter Tomatoes - Part 3

I have been pleasantly surprised with not only the quantity, but quality of the tomatoes I have received over the past month.  The Sub-Arctic plenty tomatoes put on a lot of fruit as determinates do, but now that most of that fruit has ripened it is blossoming and fruiting again.  All but 2 of the tomatoes have been very good and we have been enjoying them on salads and sandwiches.  This type of plant usually produces 4-6 oz fruit, but I did get a nice ~10 oz tomato from it.  The cherry tomatoes keep coming and the taste has gotten much better over time.














The new tomatoes/peppers are off to a great start and I am looking forward to getting them into the ground in about a month.

Boxcar Willie moved into a 5 gallon bucket for the time being.  I topped it and grew out 5 suckers.  I buried them when transplanting to hopefully get 5 growing stems.  I will bury this deep when I plant it into the garden bed.
Beefsteak Tomatoes.  Most were getting too large, so I topped them as well.  Will keep 2-5 growing stems on them


Some of my pepper starts in their new pots.  The bottom middle is an experiment growing 2 plants together (recommended by the Farmers Almanac)


Monday, March 18, 2019

Useful Links

Hey all,

FWIW, here is a set of gardening links that I have recently compiled. These are some garden things that I've found to be pretty helpful. If you got a recommendation of your own, add it! It'd be cool to get everyone's favorite item on the list:

Extension Bulletins:
This one tells you when to plant what. These are the dates for a transplant, not from seed.

If you are starting from seed, use the dates in the previous doc and use this to back track from there to know when to start from seed.
I like my starts a little bigger so I would pad that date by about 1-2 weeks.

LED Grow light: This is the one I bought off Amazon. Seemed to work fine last season and definitely reduced the hardening off period.

Heat mat + Temp control: This is the set I bought. It's been working fine for me the last few years.

Light hanging ratchet cord: If you aren't using these to move your lights up and down, you are trying too hard.
https://www.amazon.com/Light-Hanger-Rope-Ratchets-Extended/dp/B00K9R26RO/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1547583123&sr=8-3&keywords=rachet+cord

Garden Stakes: Just some generic strawberry/weed barrier stakes. They seem pretty high quality.
https://www.amazon.com/Gray-Bunny-GB-6871B-Galvanized-Irrigation/dp/B076XGM63D/ref=sr_1_fkmrnull_2?keywords=GrayBunny+GB-6871B&qid=1552940530&s=lawn-garden&sr=1-2-fkmrnull

Plant tags: These are industrial, no rust tags made out of aluminum. You can just write on them with a pen and it will emboss whatever you write. This is my first year trying them.
https://www.amazon.com/Outdoor-Gardening-Durability-Applications-Aluminum/dp/B01LP3KFWS

Potting Soil: Mark J told me about this one. It's a huge cube of potting soil for $25. It fills up one of those galvanized old timey trash cans. Great deal and pretty decent quality although, complete disclosue, some herbs I started in it came up a little sickly. Still, for the money, this is what I'm going to use.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/SunShine-Mix-4-2-2-cu-ft-Professional-Growing-Mix-with-Mycorrhizae-5047041-CFC002-2P/205674316

Thermometer: This thing is fantastic for under $20. I left it outside in my soil for two years straight and it still works great.
https://www.amazon.com/Vee-Gee-Scientific-Thermometer-160-Degree/dp/B00JE5GI3U/ref=sr_1_3?crid=OO3S7G0FY1NP&keywords=vee+gee+thermometer&qid=1552941492&s=industrial&sprefix=vee+gee+%2Clawngarden%2C184&sr=1-3