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Mark Allison 15-04-2004 07:32 AM

Golden sunrise
 
Hi,

I've sown some Golden Sunrise tomatoes and they are now a few inches tall:
http://www.organiccatalog.com/catalo...ducts_id=34 5

Tinyurl:
http://tinyurl.com/2t2w8

It says on the above website that they are bush habit. Does that mean
they can't be trained as a cordon? I was planning to grow it as a cordon
in my greenhouse.

Thanks.

--
Mark Allison, SQL Server MVP
http://www.markallison.co.uk


Martin Sykes 15-04-2004 09:03 AM

Golden sunrise
 
"Mark Allison" wrote in message
...
Hi,

I've sown some Golden Sunrise tomatoes and they are now a few inches tall:

http://www.organiccatalog.com/catalo...ducts_id=34 5

Tinyurl:
http://tinyurl.com/2t2w8

It says on the above website that they are bush habit. Does that mean
they can't be trained as a cordon? I was planning to grow it as a cordon
in my greenhouse.

Thanks.

--
Mark Allison, SQL Server MVP
http://www.markallison.co.uk


I think you can grow them as a cordon with no problems. Bush habit just
means that if you leave them as they are, they will form a self-supporting
bush unlike most varieties which will flop on the ground under their own
weight. You can grow all sorts of things as cordons such as fruit bushes or
apple trees so I can't imagine that a bushy tomato should present any
difficulties.

--
Martin & Anna Sykes
( Remove x's when replying )
http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~sykesm



Jonny 15-04-2004 08:07 PM

Golden sunrise
 
On Thu, 15 Apr 2004 07:23:47 +0100, Mark Allison
wrote:

Hi,

I've sown some Golden Sunrise tomatoes and they are now a few inches tall:
http://www.organiccatalog.com/catalo...ducts_id=34 5

Tinyurl:
http://tinyurl.com/2t2w8

It says on the above website that they are bush habit. Does that mean
they can't be trained as a cordon? I was planning to grow it as a cordon
in my greenhouse.

Thanks.

Mark, I have ticket with the one I bought from the garden centre. I
quote "Best grown with a stake support"
Happy munching,
Jonny


Mark Allison 16-04-2004 12:04 AM

Golden sunrise
 
Martin Sykes wrote:

I think you can grow them as a cordon with no problems. Bush habit just
means that if you leave them as they are, they will form a self-supporting
bush unlike most varieties which will flop on the ground under their own
weight. You can grow all sorts of things as cordons such as fruit bushes or
apple trees so I can't imagine that a bushy tomato should present any
difficulties.

Thanks - I will go ahead as planned then!

--
Mark Allison, SQL Server MVP
http://www.markallison.co.uk



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