September 15, 2020 | #406 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Victoria, Australia
Posts: 870
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Thanks Karen, still 5 more lands to go, need to get in more soil still. Been an expensive operation, but so worth it in the long run. Will be netting most of the area as well which will keep the sparrows under control and allow the addition of some runner ducks to help keep the slugs and snails under control
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September 17, 2020 | #407 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Victoria, Australia
Posts: 870
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The new bed - Photos
The first two images (5838 and 5839) fit end to end to show the full length of the new bed, 8 x (200 x 50 x 3650mm or 12 foot long) boards 3 high make up the North wall.
The next , 5828 is looking North West across the new bed and 5826 is looking east across the bed, basically what I would see driving onto the block |
September 17, 2020 | #408 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 289
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Mate thats looking Great, let me know when picking season is on lol , am Jelouse!!..
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September 23, 2020 | #409 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Victoria, Australia
Posts: 870
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Been a busy couple of days in the land of Woz, yesterday swapped some plants with a friend, on the way to purchase a rotary hoe off Mcsee, whoms garden is looking fabulous, tomatoes big strong and healthy. Same can be said for his garlic and onions. Then back home and a delivery of bees.
Bees have settled in well, did not realise that on a good day they can fly 5 miles (8 km) to find food. Gave the rotary hoe a run today and apart from a couple of tweeks, runs well. Made short work of loosing the top of one of the new lands. Land now planted with potatoes as well as another, 40 row meters, 150-160 tubers in the ground. |
October 15, 2020 | #410 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Victoria, Australia
Posts: 870
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Managed to get 63 plants in the ground today, from somewhere between 25 and 30 varieties. First few potatoes are up.
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October 15, 2020 | #411 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2018
Location: Augusta area, Georgia, 8a/7b
Posts: 1,685
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Sounds like you're off and running on your new land!
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October 30, 2020 | #412 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Victoria, Australia
Posts: 870
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Got the last of the tomatoes in the ground today. 156 if I have tallied up correctly, also some corn, carrots, parsnip, beetroot and Sunflowers in. Cucumbers and (JAP x Waltham Butternut) F2 seed sown in pots, up and will go in ground once I widen the last partially formed bed too 2 meters wide
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October 30, 2020 | #413 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Vancouver Island
Posts: 5,928
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Quote:
KarenO |
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August 21, 2022 | #414 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Victoria, Australia
Posts: 870
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Access issues have prevented me from keeping this thread running over the last couple of years, hopefully Telstra will behave themselves a bit more from now on.
The tomato seed planting Day has arrived at the Garden of Woz. Ground to wet to work, wind to bleeping cold to be standing outside doing something even though the sun was out, and as for when the sun was covered by cloud....lets not go there, so into the shed, grabbed the tomato seed containers and got to work sowing them. BIG problem, too many interesting/must grow again varieties for the 77 cells, especially as Costuloto genovese 'Brokenbar" was getting 2 cells. Hummmm, lets see She wants those ones, the youngsters want those, I want to grow them, that sounds interesting, hold on I'm out of room and there is still more to go!! Luckily these is still a bit of room on the heat pad and some 10 cell punnets floating about. The List as it stands at the moment, definitely more to come. (Not) Chocolate Stripes (PL) 100 R 42 Days Alice's Dream Artic Rose Banana Legs Barosa Moon #5941 Bendigo Blush #5944 Bendigo Moon #5950 Big Green Black Sea Man Blood Moon Bloody Butcher Blueberries Bogatyr Masalov Bowerbirds Orange Bowerbirds Yellow Burgundy F4 Captain Lucky Chang Li Cherry Chocolate Lime Stripes Costuloto Genovese "BrokenBar" Costulto Fiorentino Dana's Dusky Rose Cross F2?3 Dark Orange Muscat Cherry Dr Wyches Yellow Duncans Dutch Pear Elbonian Hip Deep Elbonian Mudball Nth Pink F5 Elbonian Mudball Sth Dark F5 Elbonian Mudslinger EM Champion Everglades Franklin County Garrote Bicolor Aracenes 859gram Golden Heart Japanese Onion John's Giant Lime Green Salad Lithium Sunset Malakhitovaya Shkatulka Marong Moon # 5954 Midnight Sun Mini Kumato, F5 Pear Moravsky Div Moya Jaune MSITKWTK '19 Orange Cherry Pear Orange, You glad Pilari Plum Lemon Polaris Post Office Spoonful Pruden's Purple Red Mini Roma Red Pear Granissimo Rita's Black Pear Rumpelstiltskin Shannon's Sherkhan Sirja's Love (Red Variant) Summertime Green Swoon Thai Pink Egg The Thong Umberto 2020 USDA 97L97 Variegated Tomato Vincent's White Volvo's Apple Cherry Volvo's Daughter No. 1 F3 Willa's Caribou Rose Yellow Cherry/Current Yellow Pear Zapotec Pleated Yellow Zena's Gift |
August 21, 2022 | #415 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Victoria, Australia
Posts: 870
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On the 29/7/22 the following went in and were placed on heat.
Peppers/Capsicums/Chillis, call them what you will. Unknown, old seed possible Jimmy Nardello's Black Panther, did not realise how hot these get at 1.1 million Scoville units, may just throw them, they certainly wont get eaten at home. Kraken, seed from an unstable cross, another at 1 million Scoville that may just get thrown if they come up. These two were seed sent to me from a contact in South Australia Rest of the seed of these two will be thrown, no point keeping something that we will not eat, unless if someone asks for them. AJI Lemon Yellow 420 gram, seed from a yellow bell of that weight from 2016 Leutschauer Paprika Santa Fe Grande Pepperdew Marconi Gold Hungarian White (ex commercial fruit) Orange Bell (ex commercial fruit) Chillie Pie Marconi Rosso Purple Beauty Chocolate Beauty Elephant Ear Pepperonici Pepperonici Yellow/Orange Flavour Burst F2 Palermo's ex commercial fruit, a group of 4 Bulls Horn Style peppers that are sweeter than bells available here Down Under, available in a red, yellow, orange and chocolate, from commercial fruit. Greens Lettuce Cimmaron Great Lakes Black Seeded Australian Yellow Leaf All starting to germinate by 2/8/22 Leaf Mustards Yakina Florida Broadleaf ( starting to germinate by 2/8/22) and on the 31/7 Lettuce Freckles Flat leaf Parsley Bok Choi Pechay Komatsuna |
August 21, 2022 | #416 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Victoria, Australia
Posts: 870
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Of those
AJI Lemon Leutschauer Paprika Marconi Gold Hungarian White (ex commercial fruit) Orange Bell (ex commercial fruit) Chillie Pie Marconi Rosso Purple Beauty Chocolate Beauty Pepperonici Pepperonici Yellow/Orange Flavour Burst F2 Palermo's ex commercial fruit, a group of 4 Bulls Horn Style peppers that are sweeter than bells available here Down Under, available in a red, yellow, orange and chocolate, from commercial fruit. Greens Lettuce Cimmaron Great Lakes Black Seeded Australian Yellow Leaf Leaf Mustards Yakina Florida Broadleaf Komatsuna Bok Choi Pechay Flat leaf Parsley Have all stared to germinate |
August 21, 2022 | #417 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Vancouver Island
Posts: 5,928
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Great looking lists, looking forward to your posts over the winter and pleased to see you are growing some of mine
KarenO |
August 21, 2022 | #418 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Central MN, USDA Zone 3
Posts: 299
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I recognized a few I have tried on your list, some that are old favorites, and a new favorite or two.
Swoon is a new favorite, quite similar to one I selected and named out of seeds offered by another poster here almost 20 years ago. "Heshpole" isn't quite as large, isn't quite as productive, and doesn't produce quite as many blemish-free tomatoes as Swoon. The only place Heshpole wins is slightly better cool night blossom retention and thereby speed to ripe tomatoes. In my MN garden, we have eaten two Heshpoles and put some in canning jars. The first Swoon might be ready tomorrow. Sherekhan (spelling on traded packet) is a small-medium striped paste. Unremarkable other than that...but it IS lovely to look at. Currently comparing to Marzano Fire and one from a former poster, Martin Longseth, who passed this year. "Martin's Super Roma" gave me large to very large paste types. My seed was old and germination was bad, but I'm working at increasing seed stock. It was a tribute grow to remember Martin. I grew a Pepperoncinis last year, and wasn't impressed. The variety I grew didn't get to a sweet, almost ripe stage before falling off the plants, rotting. Green ones exhibited little heat, and a lot of immature pepper bitterness. I hope it was Burpee seeds, not the variety itself. I hope yours do well. Pic is of two average Martin's Super Romas. One so far has been 6 oz, a couple in the 5 oz range. To compare, Marz Fire and San Marz have been about 3-3.5 oz. 2nd pic is Legenda Tarasenko, San Marz, and Marz Fire. Sent from my motorola edge using Tapatalk
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August 21, 2022 | #419 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Victoria, Australia
Posts: 870
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Thanks for the kind comments Karen. Midnight Sun is a definite favourite with my son, liked by the rest of us also so will always be on the grow list. Polaris does well here also.
Seriously considering moving to dwarfs for most of our eating tomatoes as the wind here can destroy plants tied to stakes, snapping those stakes unless they are at least 40 mm square with a well grown indeterminate. Determinates are getting a better than usual run here this year also. So many good indeterminates though... |
August 21, 2022 | #420 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Victoria, Australia
Posts: 870
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Eyolf, thanks for the informative comments and spelling correction. Will note that down.
Have heard about Martin's Super Roma, but had not seen a size reference or photo. Bigger than most of the Roma's grown down under, would be interested in seeing how it grows down here sometime. |
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