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Old 24-04-2015, 01:36 AM posted to rec.gardens
Boron Elgar[_2_] Boron Elgar[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Feb 2008
Posts: 218
Default Can I get tomato plants from seeds of store-bought tomatoes?

On Thu, 23 Apr 2015 17:13:31 -0400, Brooklyn1
wrote:

Boron Elgar wrote:
songbird wrote:

as for diseases, our location seems to favor
certain types of late season blight, but if we
can get a crop through the mid-summer it doesn't
matter what the blight does. it doesn't ruin
the fruit. last season was unusual for us in
that the disease took 90% of the crop just in
the last few weeks of ripening. greenhouse
people said it was last seen in this area 80
years ago. likely weather and growing medium
related, but hard to prove without a lab to do
the work and ways to trace things...

I have gotten blight or other fungal problems with tomatoes at times.
I gave up on rotation planting, as that did not seem to solve the
problem. I think weather is a big contributing factor with my
disorders, none of them too serious. I also grow in large tubs on the
deck, where there is no crowding. That doesn't eliminate the problems,
either, but I have never had huge losses.


Fungus with nightshades is a result of wet leaves over night. When
needed water in the AM and not the plant, water the ground only...
tomatoes are best watered with buried soaker hoses, never overhead
watering. Tomatoes also benefit from good aeration, do not crowd. I'm
fortunate in that my vegetable garden is situated alongside a small
natural spring, I plant tomatoes closest to the spring, I never need
to water as that ground is always ideally moist.



Just as over in RFC, you are a cut and paste idiot here, too.

No one controls the rain or the dew.

Tomatoes *can* be grown quite successfully in VERY crowded conditions
as my photos show. This is only mid July, too. You should see the bed
a month later. And this bed is rarely watered. The shelter of the
plantings keeps the soil shaded and moist and also keeps the weeds
down.

http://i58.tinypic.com/23sujag.jpg

http://i61.tinypic.com/1jrt5y.jpg

http://i61.tinypic.com/2n171qo.jpg

A lot of kitchen gardening can be done intensively, if one puts a mind
to it.

http://i58.tinypic.com/v5ljza.jpg

Now, back in the bozo bin, where you have spent virtually all of the
past 14 years.