Posted on 09/02/2011 5:25:52 AM PDT by Red_Devil 232
Good morning gardeners. I Hope all is well with you, your gardens and your endeavors. To make saving your prized tomato seeds easier than ever try using some Oxy-Clean. Oxy-Clean? Yep the same stuff that Billy Mays pushed in all those TV commercials! Thanks to Freeper who knows what evil? for the heads up on this easy to do technique. Here is a link to a web page that describes the procedure - Saving Tomato Seeds
Now how easy is that?
If you are a gardener or you are just starting out and are in need of advice or just encouragement please feel free to join in and enjoy the friendly discussion. Our Freeper community is full of gardeners, each with varying interests and skill levels from Master Gardener to novice.
I hope all your gardens are flourishing.
Agreed...I grow ‘Striped Cavern’ and ‘Yellow Stuffer’...tasty packed with chicken salad...
Yum. Smells heavenly.
How do you know if you have blight? What does it look like — potato and tomato?
Love your postato “sculpture”. You should enter it in the Fair. Blue ribbon for sure.
I'm trying a tip involving Epsom salts, but no change yet.
He did a fine job on the roofing, though.
Ahhh! Doesn’t he enjoy the ducks and the chickens? I ‘m far beyond my teen years, and I just love critters.
It’s good for all teens to learn practical skills, however. (and they love to hear praise from their dads, even when they won’t admit it.)
I've done harvested and rejoiced in all my pole beans, corn, and tomatoes, and pulled it all out already, fairly satisfied.
Why is it that my acorn quash did splendidly --- more than enough to eat and store and freeze and give away --- but the delectable Charentais Melons, which would seemingly have very similar cultural requirements, bore very sparingly and then withered?
I winder if I paid too much attention to my Charentais melons, tweaking the soil, watering every day during the worst of the hot weather, while practically ignoring my squash. The melons made a few, and then fizzled out, whiele the squash, thriving on neglect, came on like gangbusters.
I'm doing the Fall Crop thing now, with my lettuces, beets and turnips half-grown. Yeah, I'm turning green. That's probably better than turning purple-top-white-globe!
(A turnip reference there, for Those In The Know.)
I have used Epsom salt as a foliar spray in the past. I did not get around to it this year, and still have a bumper crop. Many swear by it, though...
If the Epsom salts isnt working you may need to put a partial shade over them. I dont remember if you are in a hot climate but Im in SC and needed to put shade over all my plants. I used a 70% shade and the ones that had been in full sun which looked all but dead took about 3 weeks to begin putting out new green shoots and are now producing. The ones I planted under shade to start with never wilted.
Squash, melons, and cukes often abort small fruit, sometimes before the flower has opened. It can result from high temps, inadequate water, or the plant's inability to support more fruit, among other causes.
If the fruit fails after the flower dies, another possible reason is incomplete pollination. You can pollinate them yourself by picking a male flower and rubbing the relevant parts on the relevant parts of a female flower. Be sure to do this no later than mid-morning.
Another possibility might be blossom-end rot (it affects more than just tomatoes).
Missouri Botanical Garden's page on blossom-end rot in cucurbits
I have no idea about the fruit shape issue. [Are you sure the two shapes don't come from different vines? I have a tomato situation like that: fruit of two different shapes and colors on what I thought was a single, multi-stemmed vine but must be two different plants growing together. The black beefsteaks are the labelled variety; the smaller dark pink oblongs with the wonderful taste are something else, probably a cross.]
If you don't get an answer here, you could ask at GardenWeb's Veggie or Squash forums (you must be a member to post, but membership is free):
Vegetable forum
Pumpkins, squash, and gourds forum
4 days ago
I am lazy my first batch will be named Beer. If it is good then I will name future batches.
So far this summer I've had 5 tomatoes none larger than 2” and 2 were from cherry tomatoes. Two of the larger ones were volunteers in the compost pile. I found 2 of those tomato worms, and killed them, but not before they stripped every leaf from my mortgage lifter. I grew more tomatoes last winter in three 6” pots than I have seen this summer.
We also have a huge crop of some sort of beetle this year, but the homemade garlic/pepper spray seems to be effective in the battle. We got enough cukes to eat this year, but not enough to can any pickles. Peppers have done only slightly better than tomatoes.
Next year, I think I will try an earth box for a tomato and pepper plant. At least that way I can drag it indoors during the heat.
Have a great weekend everyone. God Bless.
The Devil in Blue Jeans
I need a bit of advice about planting Mums in a planter. Any tips?
Thanks,
AR
Very nice, except I think that the picture of the blonde lady you posted would sell more brew! ;)
Red_Devil, Cathair, The Mourning After, Door in the Wall, Friar's Bread, Heavenly Harvest, Red Nose, Katz Brew, Tiggers Furball (after the cat)..........
My home brew kit came with bottle caps emblazoned with a "B". Everyone asked what the "B" stood for. I told them it was "Beer". Plain and simple!
Cheers- S
Tomatina in Bunol Spain. Tomatina is a tomato festival where the townspeople pelt each other with tomatoes. Anybody caught doing that at my house goes directly to JAIL!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.