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Post by lynnee on Mar 29, 2023 18:28:44 GMT -5
After only 10 days in a Harvest Seed Starter, all four of my indeterminate tomatoes looked like they were ready to go into an Aerogarden. Here they are, transplanted to a Farm 12XL. The two on the left are Black Beauties, the two on the right are Green Zebras. All of the Black Beauties germinated, and the seedlings look quite robust.
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Post by lynnee on Apr 13, 2023 18:37:32 GMT -5
Four indeterminate tomatoes in a Farm was clearly too many, so I transplanted two of them outdoors to soil. We've gotten so much rain, I don't feel guilty about using outdoor water, but I put them into pots because those use less water than plants placed in the ground. I have no idea whether these will survive, but it's better than going straight to the compost bin! [/a]
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Post by lynnee on May 31, 2023 11:34:58 GMT -5
The outdoor Black Beauty tomato has set fruit (2)! Now I have to keep the fertilizer and water going evenly, to avoid blossom-end rot.
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maskedsonnet
AGA Farmer
Without the burden of comparison, everything is beautiful
Posts: 1,607
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Post by maskedsonnet on May 31, 2023 11:49:49 GMT -5
That really is a little beauty!! I can’t wait to hear how it tastes!
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Post by scarfguy on May 31, 2023 12:07:39 GMT -5
Last year I bought a bottle of rot-stop to treat blossom end rot:
It's a foliar spray. End rot seems to be the result of calcium and magnesium not being transported through the plant properly. This product puts the calcium and magnesium directly where needed.
The problem was it left a little sticky residue on the leaves which I wasn't happy with on an indoor plant. Should be less of a concern for your outside plants.
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Post by lynnee on Jun 1, 2023 12:19:31 GMT -5
That really is a little beauty!! I can’t wait to hear how it tastes! Now I'm wondering how to tell when it's ripe? I guess that it will be ready when there's a little give to the flesh.
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Post by lynnee on Jun 1, 2023 12:21:32 GMT -5
Thanks for the Rot-Stop link, scarfguy! I ordered some.
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Post by lynnee on Jul 19, 2023 12:26:02 GMT -5
The first Black Beauty tomato from the outdoor transplant! These black tomatoes are ripe when the bottoms turn from greenish to black or red (photo below, top right). The tomato is big, and is very sweet (low acid). Both my husband and I give it a full thumbs up! This tomato arose from a double blossom, which is why it has the ugly, netty bottom. I had to slice the tomato vertically to be able to core it. I harvested the tomato early to let the plant concentrate on newly set fruit. It ripened nicely on the kitchen countertop. Thank you, maskedsonnet, for introducing me to Baker Creek heirloom seeds!
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maskedsonnet
AGA Farmer
Without the burden of comparison, everything is beautiful
Posts: 1,607
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Post by maskedsonnet on Jul 19, 2023 12:59:44 GMT -5
It’s so pretty!! I’m glad it was tasty too
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Post by lynnee on Jul 19, 2023 13:13:33 GMT -5
Here's a photo of the two transplants. Black Beauty is on the left; Green Zebra is on the right. If you enlarge the photos on your display, you can probably see the developing tomatoes. The GZs are mostly nestled in the foliage in the lower part of the plant. I've been giving these MiracleGro fertilizer dissolved in water on a more or less weekly basis. The summer has been cool, so the plants are growing slowly.
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maskedsonnet
AGA Farmer
Without the burden of comparison, everything is beautiful
Posts: 1,607
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Post by maskedsonnet on Jul 20, 2023 20:29:08 GMT -5
They both look super healthy!!
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Post by lynnee on Jul 21, 2023 13:51:53 GMT -5
Look what happens when you handle Black Beauty tomato vines! It washes off fairly easily. I usually wear gloves to prune tomatoes, even the dwarfs, because my hands smell like tomato vines afterwards if I don't.
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maskedsonnet
AGA Farmer
Without the burden of comparison, everything is beautiful
Posts: 1,607
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Post by maskedsonnet on Jul 21, 2023 19:54:27 GMT -5
I’m glad it doesn’t dye you for a long time like walnuts do!!
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Post by lynnee on Aug 3, 2023 15:18:23 GMT -5
Yesterday I brought in some of the Black Beauty tomatoes, in hopes that they will ripen faster on the kitchen countertop indoors. Also in hopes that relieving some of the burden on the plants will produce larger tomatoes. Tops up and bottoms up! 🍅🍅🍅🍅🍅
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Post by lynnee on Aug 19, 2023 12:14:15 GMT -5
The Black Beauty tomatoes that I brought indoors a few weeks ago have ripened on the kitchen countertop. If you compare today's photo (tops and bottoms) with the one in my previous post, you can see how the green bottoms turn red with ripening.
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Post by lynnee on Aug 26, 2023 17:47:14 GMT -5
8/26/23 This project is now officially ended. There were a couple of 90 degree temp days in the last couple of weeks that finished off the outdoor Black Beauty and Green Zebra plants. Today I brought in all the remaining tomatoes--a trayful--to finish ripening indoors. It was high time to take the plants down, because the Black Beauty had a lot of tiny white critters on it. Also, I'm getting bitten by chiggers that I think were jumping onto me from the tomatoes. (I get blisters from chigger bites, and of course the bites itch for days. Now the chiggers won't have that launching pad.)
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Post by lynnee on Aug 28, 2023 14:09:15 GMT -5
The first truly ripe Black Beauty tomato went into a BLT, made with AG Merlot lettuce, of course! (Bacon layer to be added.)
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Post by agnoob on Aug 28, 2023 17:47:54 GMT -5
The Black Beauties look so cool! How do they taste?
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Post by lynnee on Aug 28, 2023 18:23:00 GMT -5
The Black Beauties look so cool! How do they taste? They're absolutely delicious! Low acid, very sweet. My husband, who usually prefers higher acid tomatoes, loves these as much as I do.
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