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-   -   We Need More Tomato Plant Pictures (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=35831)

mouka_f_slouka April 5, 2015 02:44 PM

[QUOTE=AZGardener;462436]Hmm not sure why my other pics didn't upload together... These are the taxi tomatoes grown in whisky barrels, taking off![/QUOTE]

I have heard great things about Cherokee Purple tomatoes. I will see if someone in this forum has a few seeds to spare. I really want to try them out.
Great plants by the way.

heirloomtomaguy April 5, 2015 04:44 PM

[QUOTE=mouka_f_slouka;462454]I have heard great things about Cherokee Purple tomatoes. I will see if someone in this forum has a few seeds to spare. I really want to try them out.
Great plants by the way.[/QUOTE]

I can send you some cherokee purple. Just pm your address and they will be in the mail tomorrow

AZGardener April 5, 2015 09:42 PM

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Another beauty... Candy Sweet icicle.

AZGardener April 5, 2015 09:43 PM

Just one more!
 
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Yellow Radiance!

mouka_f_slouka April 5, 2015 10:20 PM

[QUOTE=AZGardener;462515]Yellow Radiance![/QUOTE]

I swear I never get tired of seeing plants grow. Some here think it's shallow. I say we need more tomato pictures!

AZGardener April 5, 2015 10:49 PM

[QUOTE=mouka_f_slouka;462518]I swear I never get tired of seeing plants grow. Some here think it's shallow. I say we need more tomato pictures![/QUOTE]
I agree! I think its pretty fascinating that almost every tomato plant in my garden looks completely different. Some plants droop a bit (like the Moonglow or Icicle) and others are beautiful an strong like Yellow Radiance and Cherokee Purple. For me, Cherokee Purple does very well every single year. It loves the heat. And this year its doing amazing! I already have a tomato the size of a big baseball... This tomato will always have a place in my garden.

Starlight April 7, 2015 11:39 AM

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I got babies too. :)

Most folks probably think my method is crazy and too much work, but it works for me. I start out using 1/2" x 1/2" x 1/2" seed trays and plant one seed per hole.

When they start hitting the lights and I see roots starting to come out of bottom of tray into a small plastic bathroom cup they go. When they start growing and I see the rootballs just starting to go round and round then they get stepped up into a three inch pot. There they will grow and get acclimatized til they go to there permanent home.

heirloomtomaguy April 7, 2015 12:23 PM

Nice starlight. Are those the only plants you started? Thought you would have had more. Lol. They look great.

Starlight April 7, 2015 12:39 PM

Thanks! I have plenty more, was too hard to try and take a pic under the shade cloth that just a few inches above them and hold camera at same time. I have about 600 plants right now and about 70 or better cultivars and about another 80 or better coming along in next batch. I just have to do in stages. That way I don't overwhelm myself and if we have tornado winds destruction again bad like last year with two touching down near by, than I don't have to worry about my crops all being destroyed at once.

I'll be sowing seed all season. Some will go for now, some for later and some for fall crop. It will be interesting for me to see how these babies all do at different times through our heat and humidity.

AZGardener April 7, 2015 01:45 PM

Starlight can you post a clearer picture of how you start your seed? I'm interested... I generally use the jiffy cell of 72 and that works fine but I think I want to try your method? Thanks in advance for sharing :)

WillysWoodPile April 7, 2015 02:14 PM

[QUOTE=charline;462009]the purple one is Searching for the blue zebra[/QUOTE]

I do not think anyone has found the Blue Zebra that Tom is specifically looking for in all the years he has been selling the seed lines that might produce the [COLOR=Navy][B]Blue Zebra. [/B][COLOR=Black]Here's to hoping that you find it.[/COLOR][/COLOR]

Starlight April 7, 2015 05:46 PM

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[QUOTE=AZGardener;462889]Starlight can you post a clearer picture of how you start your seed? I'm interested... I generally use the jiffy cell of 72 and that works fine but I think I want to try your method? Thanks in advance for sharing :)[/QUOTE]

Oh your asking for a miracle. I am the worstest ever at taking pics. I'm surprised the above doesn't have finger or feet in it.

What I do is get the 288 Plug trays. Here's a link. I don't know if the Mega Store has them cheaper or not.

[URL]https://www.growerssupply.com/farm/supplies/prod1;gs_pots_trays_containers;pg109044.html[/URL]

I take the trays and on the wide section I start cutting them up into sections where they are 3 cells wide and usually 8 or 9 cells long. I always have a long piece left and I cut that up too.

A gallon baggy will hold two trays of the 3 cells wide by 8 cells long. Unless it a big seed , almost all my veggie and flower seeds I start in this method.

Since I was growing so many different varieties this year I cut my trays up into 6 and 9 cells and a few 24 and 76 celled trays.

I fill it cell with Fafard Super Fine germinating mix. It is very fine and has everything in it to start the seeds out. You usually can find it at some garden centers or if not, some will order you in a bag. The bag is 2.8 cu. ft and one bag is about 20 bucks, but will last you for years. Some garden centers sell the small about 2 quart bags.

I fill the holes, take a mist bottle, actually it an old empty insecticidal bottle that got cleaned out and I give each cell two squirts of water that has a bit of hydrogen peroxide in it. Take a wooden stick or a paint brush, make me a tiny hole in the center, about 1/4" deep and sow one seed at a time. It's a great way to relax.

Once the seeds are in, I just cover with tiny amount of fine grade vermiculite. If I'm out of vermiculite I just add a tiny bit more seed starting mix and give one more quick squirt of water.

I cut up blinds and use two at opposite ends of each little seed tray. Stuff them in the gallon baggy. I start closing the baggy at opposite ends. When I get to the middle I hold the baggy there with my fingers and blow into it to blow it up. Makes a nice little gh effect.

Than I just put the trays on the kitchen table and I have an over head light that stays on 24/7 and I just wait til they seeds sprout. I do not use heat mats or anything like that. The heat from off the old-fashioned 60 watt lightbulbs works just as well. I just have to watch the seeds don't sprout and start stretching on me. Tomatoes no problem as they can be buried deeper.

I have to check for sprouting constantly. Once they start sprouting, more than one or two, than I remove the trays and place them into a flat that has a cut up white kitchen trash bag in it. Like what you see in the first pic. That keeps the bottom of the seedlings roots from drying out and makes them start forming rootballs inside the tiny cell. I can stuff a cut up 288 cell tray of assorted cultivars and varieties in one tray. Saves on a whole lot of space when you wanting to start hundreds of types of seeds and I can fit 4 seed trays, that over 1,100 seedlings, once out of the baggies under two of them think it 4' indoor/outdoor grow lights.

Also once they under the lights than I just water along the sides of each cell with a $1 plastic ketchup bottle from Walmart. I can water all the trays in a matter of minutes. Once they been under the lights for 7 days than I start adding tiny pinch of MG to water bottle, just a few grains. Evey time I transplant, I wait 7 days before I start adding ferts.

Draw back is that when temps start rising here, I may have to water them twice a day as those tiny trays dry out lickety-split. But, I don't have to worry about damping off disease

Once sprouted they go under the lights on the plant stand til they have their first true set of leaves, sometimes I wait til they have two sets of true leaves, just depends on how busy I am and then I start transplanting.

I transplant into the tiny bathroom plastic cups and I can get 50 of them cups on a flat to put under the lights til they ready to get transplanted into 3 or 4" and out the door.

My method is not for most folks. It too time consuming for them. But it was the way I was taught by my mentor, and his mentor who was P. Allen. Smith .

The only thing is every few days til the seeds sprout I open the baggies up and let old air out and new in and blow the bag back up. If I see to much humidity on the top of the baggy, than I take seed trays out and put in a new baggy and wash old one and dry for another set of trays.

I have it down to two squirts of water per cell because I found more than that and you can possibly mold your seeds.

I been using these trays and same method for years and years.

I still get tomatoes and peppers and other flowers. :)

BigVanVader April 7, 2015 07:42 PM

Stainless what are and where did you get those nifty trays your peppers are in?

walt456 April 7, 2015 08:51 PM

Here are a couple of mine.

[URL=http://s4.photobucket.com/user/peyo1806/media/tomato_zps98ssnej0.jpg.html][IMG]http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y138/peyo1806/tomato_zps98ssnej0.jpg[/IMG][/URL]

[URL=http://s4.photobucket.com/user/peyo1806/media/plants%20-%20Copy_zpsbvahplio.jpg.html][IMG]http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y138/peyo1806/plants%20-%20Copy_zpsbvahplio.jpg[/IMG][/URL]

mouka_f_slouka April 7, 2015 09:27 PM

[QUOTE=heirloomtomaguy;462867]Nice starlight. Are those the only plants you started? Thought you would have had more. Lol. They look great.[/QUOTE]

He has hundreds of seedlings and you're telling him that's not enough?
I don't even have one tenth of that and I consider that a lot. Are you guys selling your tomatoes by any chance?


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