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Old December 14, 2014   #16
Cole_Robbie
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Thanks, Carolyn. I am going to grow Matt's Wild Cherry for the first time next year, and I'm looking forward to it.
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Old January 11, 2015   #17
slugworth
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I grew matt's one year and it keeps coming back as a "wild" plant ever since.
The tomatoes are the size of M&M's and are difficult to pick.
When the majority are ripe in a cluster I pick the entire cluster and leave the green ones on the cluster til they ripen.Extremely disease resistant and they are the last plants in the garden when frost hits.
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Old January 11, 2015   #18
Fred Hempel
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I think I grew Matt's Wild Cherry in the past, but I wasn't tuned into issues of vigor and production enough then. I definitely need to grow it again!
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Old January 11, 2015   #19
Labradors2
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Could it be grown in a container?

Linda
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Old January 11, 2015   #20
Fred Hempel
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I kind of think any cherry tomato can. Back when I was a back-yard gardener, I used to grow all of my cherry tomatoes in containers and give them severe "haircuts" when needed.
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Old January 11, 2015   #21
Labradors2
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Haircuts! I never thought of that! I forgot to say that I was thinking of placing the container beside the (airy cattle) fence and letting the vine ramble along the fence. The soil there is solid clay and rock - hence the need for a container.
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Old January 11, 2015   #22
Worth1
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Labradors2 View Post
Haircuts! I never thought of that! I forgot to say that I was thinking of placing the container beside the (airy cattle) fence and letting the vine ramble along the fence. The soil there is solid clay and rock - hence the need for a container.
They kinda grow like a sprawling bush with not much need for support.
One of the best salad single bite tomatoes you will ever grow.
Worth
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Old January 11, 2015   #23
slugworth
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Originally Posted by Labradors2 View Post
Could it be grown in a container?

Linda
my "bonsai" matt's but that's taking it to the extreme.
16oz plastic cup next to it for scale.
regular container should be no problem and it should make a good rootstock source for grafting.
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Old January 11, 2015   #24
Labradors2
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Very cool! At least you got it to set fruit!

Thanks for sharing!

Linda
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Old January 11, 2015   #25
Fusion_power
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Quote:
solid clay and rock
Apparently you have never grown Matt's Wild Cherry. I've noticed them growing on a footpath that is packed so hard you would have to cut chunks out of it with a rock saw. I saw one a few weeks ago looking hungrily at a large sandstone and smacking its lips. Come to think of it, you better grow it in a container. It might get loose otherwise.

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Old January 12, 2015   #26
Labradors2
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Ha ha! Thanks Fusion and Worth. I have a large property, so it sounds as if I could simply let Matt's back into the wild!

Linda
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Old January 12, 2015   #27
Daryl
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Carolyn, you are amazing!
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