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-   -   Today was picture day, lots of green for Dr. Carolyn (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=38607)

Gerardo October 2, 2015 05:56 PM

Today was picture day, lots of green for Dr. Carolyn
 
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First of all, many thanks Cole_Robbie. Seeds had great germination.

Bosky Chabarovsky (in a converted H2O container) + close-up

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Pearls of Wisdom

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Green Tiger

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THTC, Ten Huang Tan Chieh (sp?)

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Tarasenko Pink

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Copper River lt, Gregori's Altai rt

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Where is Titan Red????? Down low in the middle, enveloped by Black and Brown Boar, Cosm Volkov, kellogg's bfast, and multiple Odorikos, a jungle right under a citrus tree.

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Guess the seedling. Clues. Left: There's a Y in our name. Middle: PRobeson is my poppa. Back right: Georgia claims me. Front right: no clue needed for [I]Solanum succulentus cactiferus. [/I]

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Mr. Cactus aka Fuzzy Wuzzy

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Van Wert Ohio

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Nicky Crain getting big

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Another Nicky Crain

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Carbon and friends

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Paul Robeson

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Dester, 3 of 12 on this plant. Dear Dester, please accept my apology for disparaging you.

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Tulas, I think.

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Paul Robeson and Cour di Bue

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And finally for today, Pierce's Pride

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Dr Carolyn: Hope this was a decent dose of green.

Great day to all.

Gerardo

Ricky Shaw October 2, 2015 06:40 PM

Looking good, like those Paul Robeson's.

Gerardo October 2, 2015 07:12 PM

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[QUOTE=Ricky Shaw;507379]Looking good, like those Paul Robeson's.[/QUOTE]

Thanks RShaw. Paul Robeson has been quite productive this year.

More pics.

Pink Accordion or Coeur de Boeuf, mistery 'mater.

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Nicky Crain, one more time.

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Sweet Ozark Orange

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Tasmanian Chocolate

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Volunteers

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And here's a shot of their AM breakfast, worm-veg compost + alfalfa tea.

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Cole_Robbie October 2, 2015 07:36 PM

Great pics. I'm glad to hear that the seeds did well.

carolyn137 October 2, 2015 08:14 PM

And I thought your thread title was all about GWRipes, but yes, lots of green plants and lots of green fruits.

And please, my name is Carolyn, the Dr. bit was when I was still gainfully employed in a professional capacity. I had a professional life and a personal life and the Carolyn person was my personal life.

Carolyn, as I've signed off on every post I've made since about 1982.:)

Gerardo October 2, 2015 08:24 PM

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where they end up most of the time

SOO and Dester

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pondgardener October 2, 2015 08:24 PM

In reading the thread title, I was assuming Carolyn was rolling in the green that has different presidents pictured.;) (Well maybe some is in your future anyway, Carolyn.

George

Gerardo October 2, 2015 08:31 PM

[QUOTE=carolyn137;507389]And I thought your thread title was all about GWRipes, but yes, lots of green plants and lots of green fruits.

And please, my name is Carolyn, the Dr. bit was when I was still gainfully employed in a professional capacity. I had a professional life and a personal life and the Carolyn person was my personal life.

Carolyn, as I've signed off on every post I've made since about 1982.:)[/QUOTE]

Understood. Carolyn it shall be.

barefootgardener October 3, 2015 03:25 PM

Gerardo, your tomatoes are looking really good! I am impressed. You have quite a few really good varieties. I hope they all do well for you. You have a long growing season.. Lucky guy!!

I am sure Dester forgives you for disparaging him, just look how beautiful he looks!! :P

PS: Yummy looking pizza..

Ginny

KarenO October 3, 2015 03:36 PM

your plants look fantastic!
KarenO

Gerardo October 3, 2015 08:27 PM

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thanks karenO and Ginny. It was a productive september, and it appears halloween month shall be generous too.

Here's a few from today, a good morning.

Canine obstacle course
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And then he says "No more pictures."
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So here's some flowers instead

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Then it was time for a snack, everything from the garden.

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And finally today's haul (SOO, PR, Carbon, Shannon, a mistery Heart, and Cour di Bue)

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kunosoura October 3, 2015 08:54 PM

Great photos, love the Jack Skellington shirt.

Thanks for sharing.

When does your season start/end there? Or does it?

ginger2778 October 3, 2015 09:48 PM

Gerardo, those are wonderful photos. The little boy is all boy, isn't he? Cutie pie!
That watermelon made me hungry.:)

Gerardo October 3, 2015 09:52 PM

@kunosoura: It doesn't really. The last few years I've been able to keep about half of the plants going strong. The weather has been a bit unpredictable, with unusually cold weather hitting us in Jan-Feb. And by cold I mean high 30s in the dead of night. I'm a bit inland so the daytime temps tend to be on the slightly hot side (90s max, usually 77 or thereabouts, and in the winter 60s). Never humid here. This winter is supposed to be wet but not cold.

Max downtime is two months. After that its wave after wave of seedlings to keep getting those big first fruits. The interesting part is seeing the whole spectrum of bugs and diseases, and figuring out which counterpunch is called for during that long span. It's like being in one those long 15 rounders of yesteryear.

I'm searching for compact growers with heavy fruit set and great flavor.

On a side note, I gave away a bag of tomatoes recently, prized ones, and I said "You should use these right away, they're perfect for salads or sandwiches." I went back to visit and the bag had the same knot on it 10 days later. Paul Robesons and Carbons wasted. I immediately understood what I had read on here, about that feeling. No worries.

Gerardo October 3, 2015 10:02 PM

[QUOTE=ginger2778;507542]Gerardo, those are wonderful photos. The little boy is all boy, isn't he? Cutie pie!
That watermelon made me hungry.:)[/QUOTE]

Very much a boy.

That watermelon is Diana--relatively tiny, about the size of a small winter squash, with a 10 brix.

peebee October 4, 2015 01:13 AM

What variety cucumber is that? It looks so yummy and juicy. I had one cuke from about 30 plants this year, thanks to spider mites. Last year, awash in cukes, no tomatoes. This year, loaded with tomatoes, no cukes. Go figure.

Gerardo October 4, 2015 01:29 AM

Cuke is called Hoffman's Johanna from baker creek. Excellent flavor.

Zenbaas October 4, 2015 01:54 AM

[QUOTE=Gerardo;507544]@kunosoura: It doesn't really. The last few years I've been able to keep about half of the plants going strong. The weather has been a bit unpredictable, with unusually cold weather hitting us in Jan-Feb. And by cold I mean high 30s in the dead of night. I'm a bit inland so the daytime temps tend to be on the slightly hot side (90s max, usually 77 or thereabouts, and in the winter 60s). Never humid here. This winter is supposed to be wet but not cold.

Max downtime is two months. After that its wave after wave of seedlings to keep getting those big first fruits. The interesting part is seeing the whole spectrum of bugs and diseases, and figuring out which counterpunch is called for during that long span. It's like being in one those long 15 rounders of yesteryear.

I'm searching for compact growers with heavy fruit set and great flavor.

On a side note, I gave away a bag of tomatoes recently, prized ones, and I said "You should use these right away, they're perfect for salads or sandwiches." [B] I went back to visit and the bag had the same knot on it 10 days later. Paul Robesons and Carbons wasted. I immediately understood what I had read on here, about that feeling. No worries[/B].[/QUOTE]
:no::no::no:

You're way too generous.

MissS October 4, 2015 10:09 PM

Oh dear, the little boy turned into his Skellington shirt! :surprised:

Love your avitar!

Gerardo October 5, 2015 11:38 AM

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[QUOTE=MissS;507656]Oh dear, the little boy turned into his Skellington shirt! :surprised:

Love your avitar![/QUOTE]

Oh yeah, he's been on a skeleton/spiders/bat craze since last Halloween, so this is his favorite time of the year, even more so than xmas.

I think he appreciates the art on most of my liquid nutrients way more than I do, he always finds the bats, worms and seagulls on every label.

To him Disneyland isn't the home of Goofy/Minnie/Donald/castles or that esoteric "magic," to him it's the place where they have Jack's Mansion...and he's asking to go back constantly.

Here's the full pic, there's a skeleton bodysuit on the way, so this outfit is only an interim one.
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Oh, and he'll turn 4 in late December.

MissS October 5, 2015 12:24 PM

Halloween is THE BEST for me too. I love decorating my house and yard for the kids. I dress up as well. Some of the poor children are too scared to come to the door. It's Okay, because just seeing the yard is an experience in itself.

I just love his costume and make-up. Please post a pic when the full suit is here.

When my daughter was 4, she was a witch in full green, orange and purple make-up. I thought that she looked great. I took her out trick or treating. When we came home she went out back to our goldfish pond and fell in. I pulled her out and she had seaweed hanging all over her, her make-up was running and boy did she look a sight. Here she was soaking, cold and dripping and I had to run for the camera! The best, ugliest witch I had ever seen.

Tell him he looks frightful and to have an awesome Halloween.

Happy Witching to him!

Gerardo October 15, 2015 09:29 AM

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sd zoo day.

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clkeiper October 15, 2015 01:35 PM

The tomatoes are awesome... the give away was awful! hate it when that happens. I quit giving them away. IF someone wants something for free they have to pick it, otherwise I sell it. no worries on wasting them then. If they let it go bad that is their waste of money and not my waste of fruit.

That little kid? now he is adorable. looks like a keeper to me.

Worth1 October 15, 2015 02:39 PM

Been following the thread all along everything looks great.:yes:
The dogs remind me of the pets i have had and my cat now.
Wont get up and move for anything because they trust you.
As for the give away thing I know what you mean.
One woman I give stuff to goes home and takes care of it.
She will talk the onions home and hang them up in the barn and everything.
Another lady I had to chew out about 3 months ago.
I asked her how the summer sausage was I had given her a long time ago.
She said I dont know it is in the freezer.

Martha you are a hoarder dont hoard my sausage it will go bad keeping it for too long of a time.:lol:
I mean I really cussed her out and told her son to not let her hoard my food as when we run out we will make more.
By dickens she ate the stuff and loved it.:lol:

On a side note I ended up with 8 quart freezer bags of Gallana pinta nestled in the freezer.:yes:
I cannot thank you enough for the idea, it is very close to something my mother made all of the time.

Worth

Gerardo October 15, 2015 06:25 PM

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@clkelper: Thanks. None will be given away, they will meet a good death.

@Worth: Thank u. Dogs were born in a vacant lot next to an industrial park where TVs are made. The quality person at the plant is a dog lover and somehow we got word of these guys. We were able to place 6 of them in our extended family, dog-lover kept two, we kept two, and the rest went to assorted good homes. Great pooches, headstrong, and chewing machines. Street genes provide them with a fitness that's difficult to measure. Diseases don't seem to phase them, and they're great with crowds and children. Working on improving their leash manners.

Gallina pinta is comfort food, defrost as needed. Remember, next hurdle is ceviche.


Today's basket, two views:
Wes, Bkx, German Johnson, Mt Magic + other cherry, Paul Robeson, Nicky Crain, Dester, SOO, Shannon

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Worth1 October 15, 2015 07:08 PM

"Gallina pinta is comfort food, defrost as needed. (((Remember, next hurdle is ceviche)))."
Gerardo the only ceviche I have ever had was some shrimp soaked in citrus from a street vendor in Tijuana back in 1978.
It is the only raw water critter I have ever liked besides dried Korean squid slathered in hot sesame oil.
It is something like Ojingeochae muchim and I bought it from a very nice Korean man.
People would ask what are you guys eating?
Dried squid.:shock::))
His last name was the same as my middle name so as far as he was concerned we were related.
A friend and I were some of his first customers at the store and he always gave us free samples to try out and buy.
The man was a merchant marine that got his citizenship in America opened a small store worked hard and then got his family over, wife and two children.
Then he added on a restaurant we used to eat at every week.
At the restaurant his family would eat different food and he would always invite me to eat with them.
Sometimes it would just be the left over bones to nibble on.

The tomatoes look great.:yes:

Worth

Gerardo October 16, 2015 12:16 AM

[QUOTE=Worth1;509042]"Gallina pinta is comfort food, defrost as needed. (((Remember, next hurdle is ceviche)))."
Gerardo the only ceviche I have ever had was some shrimp soaked in citrus from a street vendor in Tijuana back in 1978.
It is the only raw water critter I have ever liked besides dried Korean squid slathered in hot sesame oil.
It is something like Ojingeochae muchim and I bought it from a very nice Korean man.
People would ask what are you guys eating?
Dried squid.:shock::))
His last name was the same as my middle name so as far as he was concerned we were related.
A friend and I were some of his first customers at the store and he always gave us free samples to try out and buy.
The man was a merchant marine that got his citizenship in America opened a small store worked hard and then got his family over, wife and two children.
Then he added on a restaurant we used to eat at every week.
At the restaurant his family would eat different food and he would always invite me to eat with them.
Sometimes it would just be the left over bones to nibble on.

The tomatoes look great.:yes:

Worth[/QUOTE]

Food brings everyone together. When you are open, people let you in. Korean man sound like a driven person.

Back to this evening's feature: Blacula (1972).

Gerardo October 27, 2015 09:22 PM

11 Attachment(s)
Update on some of the plants in the initial pics of this post.


Bosky Chabarovsky. Strong, sturdy, rugose, tough, great fruit set, tons of flowers. If it tastes good it'll have a permanent spot.
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Cole recovering after canine rough play time included this plant, and the next Tasmanian Chocolate (the rootpot is 25 gallon). They've recovered well.
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Copper River. Strong plant. Some EB susceptibility.
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Fuzzy Wuzzy. Tons of flowers. Cool hairs.
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Mano. These seedlings were frail. An experiment using a small SWC.
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Joe Laurer's G Egg. Nice and symmetrical. Some EB susceptibility.
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Another Tasmanian Chocolate. I'm very impressed with this plant. If this is the norm for dwarfs, I'm a convert. All of Tasmanian Chocolate's PR siblings are welcome in my garden, and will likely take over. Thank you all for your diligent work in selecting these bad boys out.
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Van Wert Ohio. Two plants sharing a 10 gal grow bag. They are happy.
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And finally, today's haul. This has been the norm for a few weeks now. Woohoo!
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Deborah October 27, 2015 10:26 PM

How did I miss this thread? These are really great looking plants and fruits. My favorite is the snack from the garden. If you don't mind saying, what's your micro climate/area? (I understand if you choose not to answer-I'm ultra protective of my kids as I'm sure you are)

Gerardo October 27, 2015 11:44 PM

[QUOTE=Deborah;510718]How did I miss this thread? These are really great looking plants and fruits. My favorite is the snack from the garden. If you don't mind saying, what's your micro climate/area? (I understand if you choose not to answer-I'm ultra protective of my kids as I'm sure you are)[/QUOTE]

Thanks. No worries, no state secrets here. My garden is south, inland, more or less at the level of Otay Lakes. Elsewhere it might be gray, not here. Already planning three 10-12 foot tracts of RGGS for next year to counter the copious sun.


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