Kitchen Gardeners

Hello Fellow Gardeners. Wondering if anyone would be interested in sharing their success/failure info with their heirloom seedlings. I've started about 13 varieties.

Share

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Well Darcy, that's the kind of tomatoes I'm going to be planting this year. I have no idea what I'm gonna plant except for two kinds, Paul Robeson and Mandarin Cross. I'm going to plant 8 plants this year, and hope that I do well with the new techniques I've learned. I'll be getting the tomatoes from a woman who is truly a master tomato grower, so I'm crossing my fingers that the plants I get will be healthy and hearty. If you want to see the list of the choices, you can look here. This isn't going to be easy!!!!

I'm trying to think of my priorities, and what types of things I want. Since we don't get a lot of hours of sunlight in this mountain valley, I am going to focus on smaller tomatoes, even though I just love the big ones - those just don't get enough sun to really ripen well. I know I want at least two Sun Gold tomato plants, probably a yellow pear and there's a green cherry, I think called "Green Grape".

But as to the others, I really don't know. I will be staking the big ones with concrete reinforcing wire, which has holes that are 4-5 inches and are about 8 feet tall. I will also use rebar to stabilize the cages.

Reply to This

The ideas for the cages and the rebar is something I learned from Love Apple Farms.

Reply to This

Hello. I just transplanted my seedlings into larger containers today. Some success stories and others not so hot. I planted : Red Pear, Black Cherry, Arkansas Marvel, Big White Pink Stripe, Pineapple Tomatoe, Jenny Hybrid, Amana Orange, German Green, Ace 55, Aunt Rubys Yellow Cherry, Genovese and just received my Tomato Spoon seeds. Only one out of 3 Red Pears germinated along with the Big White Pink Stripe, Amana Orange,and German Green. It seems to me that the larger the fruit the less success rate with germination. I am going to do another run of seeds now that the temperature will be faily consistent within the house. Aside from the one hybrid tomato the success rate is about 66% Maybe another run will prove differently. Is it spring yet? I just used a new implement on my tractor to till up the garden. How did I ever do it before without it?

Reply to This

This sounds interesting. I just love the taste of heirloom tomatoes. I love the Pineapple Tomato. I see that is on your list. It has a mild, sweet, tomato taste. We saved the seed. They did well for about three years and then the plants got spindly and the tomatoes wanted to get mushy. I don't know if it was a bad season or that they got some kind of blight. I have planted Pink German. These are my favorite large main season crop for eating or canning. I tried the Russian Black. I didn't like the flavor of these and the color turned us off, especially the dark tomatoes in a can looked spoiled, as we are used to the nice red tomatoes. I had very good success canning the Pineapple tomatoes. They looked lovely in the can with the little pink stripe, and they tasted wonderful. I gave my daughter-in-law a can of these along with several other varieties. When she got the Pineapple Tomato Jar out, she thought it was peaches. She was disappointed as she was in the mood for a wonderful peach cobbler. I wonder what a tomato cobbler would taste like? I'm guessing it would be wonderful, as tomatoes are classified as a fruit. My husband doesn't like to bother with saving seeds, so he likes the hybrid tomatoes. I think all of us need to know how to save seeds and grow heirloom plants to save the plant diversity and to be ready in case of a national disaster. What do you think? Ruby Brown

Reply to This

Hi Ruby! This is the very reason why we are planting heirloom veggies this year. We intend to save the seeds and be ready for a disaster. My husband and I have been tracking a couple of things that give us cause to think we should be prepared. We have been doing this for about 20 years and so far we haven't changed our minds. The depression we are in right now is one such thing that we have been watching for and it is here and getting worse. No, I am not a nut job! Anyone out there remember hearing about "Planet X" 20 or so years ago? Then nothing more was said about seeing 2 suns, etc? It hasn't gone away. Not only are we going with heirloom but we are going with raised beds due to age creeping up on us. More like age is hurdling up on us! I love reading all these posts but right now I don't have a whole lot of advice or answers for anyone. Some of you are so knowledgeable that I may be yelling help if this snow and cold ever goes away!
Rita

Reply to This

Thank you very much for the information I really appreciate it!!
I found this useful site for gardening seeds

Reply to This

The larger the tomato the less success rate I have with seedlings. Ive been contemplating buying a set of heirloom plants already started from park seeds just for comparison. I also read somewhere to put calcium in the hole before you burry heirlooms. Anyone ever try this? Ive never read it anywhere except one article in southern living. Iam curious as to try it on one or two of my plants.

Reply to This

Regarding calcium. Yes, it prevents early blossom end rot. We keep chickens and save the shells all year. At tomato planting time we pulverise the shells, mix them with some organic fertilizer and add a liberal handful to each hole. We water in the seedlings with a dilution of fish emulsion. The only blossom end rot we've ever had was with a plant given to us that we plopped in randomly and somewhat carelessly without the above described treatment. (We plant roughly 100 tomato plants each year...just to give you an idea of what I'm talking about).

Reply to This

Well, my signifigant other and I just attempted to peice together our first pvc drip system for the garden. Only a few small arguements occured. ANybody know any tricks for keeping my blossoms from falling off? Once I get this system in place I think that will help. We just had all that crazy flooding.

Reply to This

I've got Beefsteak, Red Brandywine & Amana Orange in their little 3" peat pots waiting for warmer nights. They are fairly hardened off now but I still bring 'em in at night, just in case. I've got a huge seed order due in from Baker Creek & Bountiful Gardens.

The toms love our native soil here, acidic & somewhat sandy. The local public works operates a composting facility for residents and all my beds are filled with that. Not real compost per se, that I add from my own pile out back. The boro ONLY takes leaves, limited size branches & some viney things curbside. So to the facility I bring grass, pineneedles, and other doodads. They don't "let" residents take the beautiful leaf mold (go figure) so I usually hide behind a pile and stuff it in my lined trunk.

I've also learned the toms, for me, do best on neglect. The only real work I do is pinching off the suckers & support. When I lived in southern California I had tomato plants that were 9 years old. Different world here. I also get fish trimmings from seafood purveyor (I'm a chef by trade) and I grind that up and mix it in the surrounding soil when planting. I underplant with carrots , marigolds, and annual clovers too. Hornworms go to the Robins and BlueJays. Then I try to forget them till I eat them.

In the past I've trellised with tripods of rebar with terracotta pots to hold them at the top. This year I'm doing raised beds with either cattle panels or copper piping, can't decide.

Only ever used heirlooms from reputable sources, only open pollinated too. The only real failures I've had with toms is when I paid them too much attention. No hybrids or newer, improved types, not in 13 years. When I get my seeds from Baker & Bountiful I will post again with regard to varieties.

Regards, Kitty

Reply to This

All of my plants are in the ground. I am in Fla. so the weather has become hospitable. my father is a fisherman and for next years garden I think I will bury, deeply that is, carcuses. I also, for the first time have chickens in a moveable arc. I am going to move them to my future garden sight as well. I read somwhere that heirlooms love calcium. Never read that anywhere else. I put a scoop of manure compost then soil then the plants for an experiment. Most seem to love it. I planted some carrots beneath but they were washed away by the flood we had. I do have tons of marigolds planted all around. I would like to add more odiferous herbs as well. Have one basil plant.
Later in the season I am going to experiment with compost tea. I've never used it. I
I've also planted some unusual squash and are looking forward to their success:)

Reply to This

Get the fish guts too! If your dad has any kind of grinder or pulverizer, buzz the whole mess up! I take that resulting concoction (& hold my nose) and put the mess through layers of cheesecloth for my fish emulsion foliar spray. Not sure if it's right to use raw (& fermented by the time I get to it, REALLY stinky) but plants seem to love the stuff. I find the ground up bones, innards & such breaks down a lot faster, easier for worms, microbes, bacteria, invertebrates, etc.

good luck!

Reply to This

RSS

KGI's book of the month

Latest Activity

Everett McDonald added a blog post
My father-in-law Fred Pond died ten years ago. He loved his garden and I still miss him a lot especially at this time of year when the seed catalogues start arriving. The Pond family lived on a seven acre homestead of sorts in Westford Massachuset...
7 minutes ago
I think this might need it's own category, don't you? Tomatoes are one of the most popular things to grow and we've been placing them in all kinds of groups, but the fact is we almost all grow them, and they have specific needs.
43 minutes ago
The cooking shows are entertaining, but that's all. Some of my favorite recipes started with notes handed down from family. They're still as good as ever. James Beard, Joy of cooking, and Professional Chefs Manural are good references. I have over...
1 hour ago
2 hours ago
2 hours ago
2 hours ago
4 hours ago
Greetings everyone :D Sice we've been having such odd weather this year, I decided to try getting my garlic in the ground this past weekend. Now I hope that it'll all grow nicely.
5 hours ago
Amanda Williams and Maggie are now friends
6 hours ago
Donald you lucky to live in an area where you can start a new hive at any time during the year! In New York one could never start a new package in December! =8-o We'd love to see pix of your current hive. :)
8 hours ago
marion stewart added a blog post
Red osier dogwood is just the best plant for this time of year – cut down some branches – you can find them in fields and ditches and then place them in garden pots or containers. Fill the over-season containers with soil to hold the stems. Attach...
8 hours ago
Hi Everyone: I am new to kitchen gardeners and I currently have one bee hive and I am planning on buying one four pound package of bees and a queen in December. If my luck is strong I will also capture a swarm and end up with three total hives goi...
8 hours ago
Donald joined Joy Williams's group
Bees! How they benefit us, how to keep them, how to maintain them! Experts invited, and welcome.
8 hours ago
I had not heard of this new link of cell phone towers to CCD, but I believe that CCD is caused by a number of different things and is mostly limited to large scale professional beekeepers that put their bees on large semi-trucks and haul them all ...
9 hours ago
Donald updated their profile
9 hours ago
Oi! Penelope! The cooking shows are designed to make people who've grown up eating processed foods and without a Fannie Farmer in the house want to go to a restaurant and be demanding, or buy expensive, exotic ingredients that they'll mostly never...
9 hours ago
9 hours ago
Yes! Sun flowers .I went there yesterday. The site of sun flowers is spactacular.But flowers seem smaller then big variety which I have seen growing their previously.
10 hours ago
laurent barbier, Helen Pereira, Sara Lim and 3 more joined Kitchen Gardeners
12 hours ago
16 hours ago

Notes

HOW TO - ADD A LINK

Several people have experienced difficulty putting working links into comments and blogs etc and I know it is clumsy.... so here is how you do it.....

First type the text you want to appear....  ie  IAN'S PAGE

Then go back and highlight the link text.

Then hit the hyperlink button...a pictogram of a chain link.

Your browser may intervene and request permission to allow temporary scripting or some similar message.   Allow it and go back and highlight the text again

Continue

Created by Ian Jun 7, 2009 at 7:28pm. Last updated by Ian Jun 8.

Forum Policy

Hi, I'm starting to put together a few guidlines on using the discussion forum on here.

I would be happy to hear any comments you may have.  This is very much a work in progress so plese feel free to ask me to add anything you think is needed.

I don't want to make our community hide bound by rules and regulations but I think that, as the community has grown, some explanation of what is expected is needed.

Administration

You can refer any que

Continue

Created by Ian May 23, 2009 at 1:55am. Last updated by Ian May 25.

Climate maps

Hi following recent discussion I have put climate maps of the USA, Australia and Europe on here for reference..

 Climate map of the USA

Climate map of Australia

Climate map of Europe

 

Continue

Created by Ian Sep 12, 2008 at 6:20pm. Last updated by Ian Apr 14.

Recipes, Recipes, Recipes

Hi Everyone,  I've started to collect together recipes from various posts on the site and put them all together here.

If you have a recipe you want to add on here, just post it on the site and leave a comment on my page telling me where it is and I'll go and fetch it back here.

They are organised in Contributor Order but I'm open to better suggestions!

BEVA'S RECIPES

Continue

Created by Ian Jun 2, 2008 at 9:54am. Last updated by Ian Apr 13.

US STATES ABBREVIATIONS

 

US STATE ABBREVIATIONS

AK - Alaska               AL - Alabama              AR - Arkansas
AZ - Arizona              CA - California           CO - Colorado
CT - Connecticut          DC - Dist of Columbia *   DE - Delaware
FL - Florida              GA - Georgia              GU

Continue

Created by Ian Jan 27, 2009 at 4:27pm. Last updated by Ian Jan 27.

HOW TO - MAKE COMPOST

Recently there was an excellent discussion about composting. I’ve pulled together all the various comments here. You can also watch KGI's video on composting here.

 

 

KATE’S ADVICE

I used to have a tumbler that we made from a wine-barrel but

1 you have to fill it up all at once

2. it seemed mostly

Continue

Created by Ian May 30, 2008 at 5:29am. Last updated by Roger Jan 15.

Notes Home

Welcome to Notes.

To view notes that are in the system hit the "all notes" button above.

Continue

Created by Ian May 28, 2008 at 12:10pm. Last updated by Ian May. 30, 2008.

A Note about Notes

I have just written this note so that I can see what we can achieve by using this new feature.

If you read this and have any suggestions then please leave a comment on my page or email me.

Ian

Continue

Created by Ian May 28, 2008 at 6:19pm. Last updated by Ian May. 28, 2008.

© 2009   Created by Kitchen Gardeners International

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!