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#1
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preparing (tomatoes0 for first frost in Colorado Front Range
Hello:
I've been pulling a few pounds per week of tomatoes off of my plants. This is my second year growing. Last year, I didn't make any preparations for the first frost, and I ended up yanking green tomatoes off the vine in the middle of a snowstorm. They were frozen, and ruined, by the time I got them inside. What should I do this year to ensure that I get the most out of my tomatoes as we lead up to the first frost? I feel like it could come at any time... is there any kind of hotline? Cheers, Stephen |
#2
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preparing (tomatoes0 for first frost in Colorado Front Range
On Mon, 22 Sep 2003 03:48:57 GMT, "Stephen Younge"
wrote: Hello: I've been pulling a few pounds per week of tomatoes off of my plants. This is my second year growing. Last year, I didn't make any preparations for the first frost, and I ended up yanking green tomatoes off the vine in the middle of a snowstorm. They were frozen, and ruined, by the time I got them inside. What should I do this year to ensure that I get the most out of my tomatoes as we lead up to the first frost? I feel like it could come at any time... is there any kind of hotline? Cheers, Stephen http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/co.../cc960926.html |
#3
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preparing (tomatoes0 for first frost in Colorado Front Range
I've been pulling a few pounds per week of tomatoes off of my plants. This
is my second year growing. Last year, I didn't make any preparations for the first frost, and I ended up yanking green tomatoes off the vine in the middle of a snowstorm. They were frozen, and ruined, by the time I got them inside. What should I do this year to ensure that I get the most out of my tomatoes as we lead up to the first frost? I feel like it could come at any time... is there any kind of hotline? You may want to visit this site. It has some helpful information on green tomatoes: http://www.colostate.edu/Depts/CoopE...t/ripening.htm sed5555 |
#4
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preparing (tomatoes0 for first frost in Colorado Front Range
Stephen Younge said:
Hello: I've been pulling a few pounds per week of tomatoes off of my plants. This is my second year growing. Last year, I didn't make any preparations for the first frost, and I ended up yanking green tomatoes off the vine in the middle of a snowstorm. They were frozen, and ruined, by the time I got them inside. There was probably not much you could have done (by covering your tomatoes) in the face of a snowstorm, except to have started picking the potentially ripenable sooner. What should I do this year to ensure that I get the most out of my tomatoes as we lead up to the first frost? I feel like it could come at any time... is there any kind of hotline? When the predicted lows get below 40 degrees, I start to check for frost and freeze advisories. On clear, still nights I can get frost at the bottom of the yard even when the actual low is 37 degrees F. I usually check theWeather Channel online for frost and freeze advisories. (Mind the line wrap.) http://www.weather.com/maps/activity...ezeadvisories_ large.html -- Pat in Plymouth MI (someplace.net is comcast) Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced. (attributed to Don Marti) |
#5
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preparing (tomatoes0 for first frost in Colorado Front Range
"Stephen Younge" wrote in message news:Jiubb.545475$uu5.90682@sccrnsc04...
Hello: I've been pulling a few pounds per week of tomatoes off of my plants. This is my second year growing. Last year, I didn't make any preparations for the first frost, and I ended up yanking green tomatoes off the vine in the middle of a snowstorm. They were frozen, and ruined, by the time I got them inside. What should I do this year to ensure that I get the most out of my tomatoes as we lead up to the first frost? Pick them before it frosts, maybe now if they are big enough. Listen to NOAA radio or the Weather Channel, and act accordingly. Anything elaborate to protect them against frost probably won't do much to increase yield, at least not enough to justify the effort and time involved, and you run the risk of losing them all if it gets colder than you thought it would. J. Del Col |
#7
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preparing (tomatoes0 for first frost in Colorado Front Range
If a minor frost is expected, you can throw towels, sheets, newspapers, etc
over plants - that's when the low might be predicted to be between 31- 35. Anything colder than that, and you are best off picking everything and setting all the fruit on a warm windowsill to ripen. "Pat Kiewicz" wrote in message ... Stephen Younge said: Hello: I've been pulling a few pounds per week of tomatoes off of my plants. This is my second year growing. Last year, I didn't make any preparations for the first frost, and I ended up yanking green tomatoes off the vine in the middle of a snowstorm. They were frozen, and ruined, by the time I got them inside. There was probably not much you could have done (by covering your tomatoes) in the face of a snowstorm, except to have started picking the potentially ripenable sooner. What should I do this year to ensure that I get the most out of my tomatoes as we lead up to the first frost? I feel like it could come at any time... is there any kind of hotline? When the predicted lows get below 40 degrees, I start to check for frost and freeze advisories. On clear, still nights I can get frost at the bottom of the yard even when the actual low is 37 degrees F. I usually check theWeather Channel online for frost and freeze advisories. (Mind the line wrap.) http://www.weather.com/maps/activity...freezeadvisori es_ large.html -- Pat in Plymouth MI (someplace.net is comcast) Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced. (attributed to Don Marti) |
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