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Old 15-09-2012, 06:38 PM posted to rec.gardens.edible
zxcvbob zxcvbob is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 535
Default Tomato variety "Jetsonic"

The Cook wrote:
On Sat, 15 Sep 2012 08:29:28 -0500, zxcvbob
wrote:

The Cook wrote:
On Fri, 14 Sep 2012 18:57:26 -0500, zxcvbob
wrote:

A couple of years ago, Totally Tomatoes sent out sample packets of
Jetsonic tomato seeds. I still have mine, and am thinking about
planting them next year because they are supposed to be earlier than my
favorite, Better Boy. My BB's are just now finally getting ripe, 3
weeks later than my friends' tomatoes. (I did get them in the ground
late, but usually they catch up)

I can't find anything about this variety, and TT doesn't list it
anymore. Did anybody else get a packet and actually plant them? How'd
you like 'em?
I got a sample packet in 2009 according to the date. It says that
they are supposed to mature in 68 days after transplanting. I
evidently planted them in 2009 but my spreadsheet for that year seems
to end in early July with none picked. Since I did not plant them
again I must have decided that they were not spectacular.

My Better Boy packets say that they mature in 78 days.

I have decided that Early Girls do not mature enough earlier than
Better Boys to make it worth the trouble.


Thanks Susan. I will plant them next year, but will also plant a few
BB's just in case the Jetsonic are a bust. (there might be a reason the
variety disappeared -- like if they are mushy, or all red and no flavor)

Bob



If I can find a later version of my 2009 spreadsheet I can get an idea
of how productive (or not) they were.

Where are you located? My tomatoes are just about done for. There
are a few plants with small green ones on them. I don't think that
there will be any more sets since the night temps are getting down
into the 50's. Peppers and okra are still happy.



I'm in SE Minnesota. Zone 4. My okra and peppers have been producing
for about a month, but are just now kicking into high gear (I think it's
a daylength thing.) I think my squash is finished, but that's mainly
because the dogs kept running through it. The okra is too big to
trample, and the peppers and tomatoes are in wire cages.

Next year I will try harder to keep the dogs out of the garden, but also
will crisscross everything with wires so it's no fun to run through.

Bob