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#1
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When do you pick tomatos?
Hi all,
We've been picking them when they're still green then putting them on the window sill to ripen. The birds don't have chance, but I wonder if we're picking them too early. Recommendations greatly appreciated. -- Ben in Melbourne. |
#2
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Ben Thomas (munged @) wrote: We've been picking them when they're still green then putting them on the window sill to ripen. The birds don't have chance, but I wonder if we're picking them too early. Most tomato varieties continue improving in flavor on the vine until they're dead-ripe. I think that's the major reason many people grow their own. Protective netting to keep the birds off is probably worth the (minor) expense & hassle. Don Fitch, Covina CA USA |
#3
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"Ben Thomas" wrote in message
... We've been picking them when they're still green then putting them on the window sill to ripen. The birds don't have chance, but I wonder if we're picking them too early. I used to wait till they were red and fully ripe but read an article where one of the gardening experts (I think it was Cundall?????) suggested picking them when they were pinkish. He was right - they end up being superb. |
#4
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well ben it may ultimately come down to you mate,
usually i pick them when they are starting to turn usually a yellowish green colour. now i put them on a tray under a tea towel so the gas from the riper ones helps to ripen the others. but where i can i leave them until they are fairly red maybe not ready to eat red but will be the next day or 2 ok. but if you have bird problems then the best time to pick is when they start to get that whitish appearnace to parts of them ok. now to keep the birds away so you can get more ripening time on the vine and by my reckoning that much more flavour cover you plants with some netting type curtain materila ok, or make scare crows from wine bladders, just you gotta suffer drinkin all the wine hey yuk lol. ost birds don't like the brite red/orange colours so if you can put a splash of these colours on those once emptied wine bladders will help. now if you live anywhere near me i reckon we could have a good time emptying wine caskes huh?? enjoy and have fun len snipped -- happy gardening 'it works for me it could work for you,' "in the end ya' gotta do what ya' gotta do" but consider others and the environment http://members.optusnet.com.au/~gardenlen1/ my e/mail addies have spam filters you should know what to delete before you send. |
#5
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len gardener wrote:
well ben it may ultimately come down to you mate, usually i pick them when they are starting to turn usually a yellowish green colour. now i put them on a tray under a tea towel so the gas from the riper ones helps to ripen the others. but where i can i leave them until they are fairly red maybe not ready to eat red but will be the next day or 2 ok. but if you have bird problems then the best time to pick is when they start to get that whitish appearnace to parts of them ok. now to keep the birds away so you can get more ripening time on the vine and by my reckoning that much more flavour cover you plants with some netting type curtain materila ok, or make scare crows from wine bladders, just you gotta suffer drinkin all the wine hey yuk lol. ost birds don't like the brite red/orange colours so if you can put a splash of these colours on those once emptied wine bladders will help. now if you live anywhere near me i reckon we could have a good time emptying wine caskes huh?? enjoy and have fun len This is what i was led to believe, also. |
#6
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On Fri, 21 Jan 2005 01:10:35 +0000, Ben Thomas wrote:
Hi all, We've been picking them when they're still green then putting them on the window sill to ripen. The birds don't have chance, but I wonder if we're picking them too early. Recommendations greatly appreciated. Let them ripen on the vine they taste much better and invest in a shot gun! |
#7
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We picked 9Kg of green ones for pickles yesterday. Then we picked another
3-4Kg of varying shades from just starting to colour to fully red. We have a friend who uses all colours in her cooking. Herself, hubby & 3 ankle biters went through 3/4 of a bucket in 2 days. With just SWMBO & myself we grow them for others so they can have whatever colour they like. Me almost rotten & full of flavour SWMBO pink & firm. Takes all kinds, so pick what you like to eat. Jim "Ben Thomas" wrote in message ... Hi all, We've been picking them when they're still green then putting them on the window sill to ripen. The birds don't have chance, but I wonder if we're picking them too early. Recommendations greatly appreciated. -- Ben in Melbourne. |
#8
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Hi everyone,
Thanks for the suggestions. I'll think I'll grab some netting so I can leave the tomatos on the plants longer. Do apples make things ripen quicker? Ben |
#9
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g'day ben,
gald to be of some help as all the others will be. the ultimate is to leave them on the vine until they are well ripe and pick early in the morning, but i have things that are atracted to nice vine ripened tomatoes as i am they are colled rodents, along with the fig brids, black faced cuckoos and king parrots. yes a ripening apple will work as will a ripening tomato we pick early then put them onto trays on a cloth and cover with a tea towel to keep teh gasses in, it works and the flavour will leave any bought fruit hands down. snipped -- happy gardening 'it works for me it could work for you,' "in the end ya' gotta do what ya' gotta do" but consider others and the environment http://members.optusnet.com.au/~gardenlen1/ my e/mail addies have spam filters you should know what to delete before you send. |
#10
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In article , Ben Thomas
wrote: We've been picking them when they're still green then putting them on the window sill to ripen. The birds don't have chance, but I wonder if we're picking them too early. I think you are, but I've never had problems with birds eating them here in Sydney (what birds go for them?). I pick them when they're ripe, or very close to it. If birds are a problem, try netting. BTW, have you noticed there is a little "elbow" ont the tomato stalk? Break them off there and you run less risk of damaging the fruit or plant. -- Chookie -- Sydney, Australia (Replace "foulspambegone" with "optushome" to reply) "Life is like a cigarette -- smoke it to the butt." -- Harvie Krumpet |
#11
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Chookie wrote:
I think you are, but I've never had problems with birds eating them here in Sydney (what birds go for them?). Bulbulls. The ones with red and the spike feathers on the back of the head. |
#12
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Chookie writes:
I think you are, but I've never had problems with birds eating them here in Sydney (what birds go for them?). Currawongs do. Except they don't touch the cherry tomatoes, I found. -- John Savage (my news address is not valid for email) |
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