Showing posts with label Vegetable garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vegetable garden. Show all posts

Sunday, August 11, 2013

August Tomato Update


Shade Gardener Blog Cherry TomatoOK, I'm sold on the heirloom tomatoes for cool coastal regions. 

We’ve been eating the Nikolayev Yellow Cherry tomatoes for a couple weeks now and those are SO GOOD.  The plant is covered in tomatoes and they're coming on slowly, but wow.  I'm not a big 'cherry tomato' fan, but we can't stop eating these.  Like fruity cherry tomatoes that you can't stop picking. 

Next year we'll plant several more of this kind to keep us in our new favorite 'candy tomatoes'.





Shade Gardener Blog Heirloom Tomatoes
 
 
 
 
 
 
Yesterday we tried our first Sasha Altai tomato.  Also loaded with tomatoes, but only one was ready to eat.  It was very good and hard to describe.  Not as acidic, but not as sweet, either.  The tomatoes are described as having 'complex flavor'...which explains why we really couldn't describe the flavor.

 
 
 
 

 
August 10th
 
Summer is in high gear and the garden is busy being a garden.  As for the current growth/production of the tomatoes, well July was the month of"take off and grow", and August is the month of "get busy setting tons of fruit".The indeterminate tomatoes (vining ones) are still growing like crazy and also putting on more and more tomatoes.The plants have all shot up and have been covered with blossoms and now they are covered in tomatoes. 
 
Shade Gardener Blog - Sub-Irrigation Gardening
 

 
Shade Gardener Blog Sub-Irrigation Gardening


Even the peppers are taking off for the summer.  (Italian Roasters)












Shade Gardener Blog - Sub-Irrigation Gardening






Nikolayev Yellow Cherry has been such a surprise.  This is a 'semi-determinate', but we think of it as a short little guy - covered with the sweetest tomatoes you've ever tasted.  We check this one over for new orange tomatoes several times a day...just in case one or two are ready to eat.






Shade Gardener Blog - Sub-Irrigation Gardening 
 
 
 

 
 
Heinz 9129 is loaded with tomatoes already, which surprised me.  It will be one of the latest to come ripe, but I am very impressed with how much fruit it already has and how large they are.  The tomato is stocky, very healthy and full of fruit.  We look forward to trying them out and see how they taste.






Shade Gardener Blog - Sub-Irrigation Gardening






Azoychka is a vining tomato that grows and grows - and has tons of tomatoes on it.  These are on the outside of the plant as well as deep inside the shady middle.  I mistakenly thought that an heirloom may not produce as heavily as the hybrids do, but boy was I wrong on that one. 

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Heirloom Tomato Experiment


We've all heard that you should try heirloom vegetables, right?  Well, I'm from the extreme cold, where the growing season is short and hybrids are your friend.  I'm not talking about the GMO hybrids, I mean the good old fashioned 'short season' hybrids.

Here in the Pacific Northwest, however, I have a temperate climate, nice weather and no severe freezing (when you're used to -20 to -40 in the winter, an occasional 10 degrees is nothing).  The downside, however, is that it is cool in the evenings and it rains until the 4th of July, which is not ideal tomato weather.  We didn't like how our local selection of 'Better Boy' or 'Early Girl' performed for us, so I started thinking about a cool weather tomato - and if they even exist.

Enter TomatoFest.com.  Their website listed more tomatoes than I ever imagined and even had a 'Cooler Coastal Collection' with 8 different kinds.  This collection looked good enough - tomatoes from Russia, China, Alaska and one from Heinz - all heirlooms and supposed to do great in our cool evening area.  So I took the plunge, got the seeds and started them early on (April), so I could set them out when it was warmer.

They all sounded great, we were skeptical, so I started 4 of each strain, just in case they didn't have a high germination rate.  Surprise!  All of them sprouted and we soon had little tomato plants crowding under our grow lights.

Here are the tomatoes included in our collection (by shortest time to tomatoes to longest):

Name
Height
Days
Season
Fruit Size
Color
From
Type
Sasha's Altai
Determinate
 
57
Early
5"
Bright Red
Southern Russia
Heirloom
Gold Dust
Determinate
 
62
Early
2"
Yellow-Orange
New Hampshire
Open Pollinated
Zhefen Short
Determinate
 
68
Early
3"
Pink
Zhengiiang China
Heirloom
Azoychka
Indeterminate:
 
70
Mid
3"
Yellow / Orange
Russia
Heirloom
Nikolayev Yellow Cherry
Semi-determinate:
 
71
Mid
Cherry
Bright Yellow
Russia
Heirloom
Sunset Red Horizon
Indeterminate
 
72
Mid
5"
Red
Southern Russia
Heirloom
Heinz-9129
Determinate:
 
73
Mid
3"
Bright Red
Ohio / Ontario
Open Pollinated
Japanese Black Trifele
Indeterminate
 
81
Late
6"
Black Purple
Russia
Heirloom

Here's what I did when I planted them:

Box Prep
Potting soil
Sub-irrigation planter  (see my other posts for info on this one)
1 cup of lime in the top  4" of soil
2 tomatoes per box

Layout in the garden
Street 1
Box 1
Zefen/Heinz
Box 2
Peppers
Box 3
Azoy/Nicholai
Arbor
Box 1
Sunset/Japanese
Box 2
Red Bore Kale
Box 3
Gold Dust/Sasha
Garage

Planting Time - in each planting hole
Small handful of Cascade Minerals
Small handful of HuMagic (Hendrikus Organics)
Small handful of Organabloom (Hendrikus Organics)

1st weekend in June
Spray-N-Grow Micronutrient Spray

1st weekend in July
Spray-N-Grow Micronutrient Spray

1st weekend in August
Spray-N-Grow Micronutrient Spray

Water sub -irrigation planter daily

Progress:
March started seeds indoors

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
April 9 - moved tomatoes to larger containers
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
May planting time in containers under cover.  Moved out last weekend in May.
June 5

 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
 
June 27

 











July 5 - Trellises added
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
July 15







I'll add update posts as the summer progresses. 

Happy Gardening!

 

 

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Overhead / Vertical Tomato Trellis - Let Them Reach for the Sky

This year I'm doing a few tomato experiments. I wanted to find 'the perfect tomato' for us, so I decided to try a bunch of different heirloom tomatoes that were suitable for the Pacific Northwest and see which ones we liked the best. I got a seed collection of 8 'cooler coastal' varieties from Tomatofest.com that sounded promising.


Tomatoes in sub-irrigation planter bed
Tomatoes in Sub-Irrigation Planter Bed

I started the seeds pretty early and got a very high percentage of seedings, which was good and bad.  I planted one plant of each in the SIPs and a second plant in the flower garden, so I could compare how the different plants did under different circumstances.  Then I gave some away and tucked the extras into other flower beds,  so we'd have alot of tomatoes for canning this fall.


Tomato trellis
Tomato Trellis mock up
It's now July and the tomatoes are getting out of control. 



I know I should have staked them earlier, but I told myself I had more time and let them sneak up on me.  The tomatoes are leaning over the sides of the SIP bed boxes, completely covering the kale and threatening the potatoes and nectarine tree.






Adding paint to the trellis
Painting the trellis a bright color



Time to add support - but I'm not sure how big the 'determinate' ones will get, so I tried to plan ahead this time.  Half the tomatoes are determinate (4' tall??) and the other half are indeterminate and will likely grow so tall they cover the arbor we have set up for them. 

Regardless of tomato type, it seemed like a good idea to add support that could extend vertically about 6' from the soil level.

This year we decided to try a 'sawhorse' approach, legs on each end, a long bar on the top and low on each side and support strings that the tomatoes could climb.



Trellis legs and bamboo rails get sealer
Adding a UV sealer coat

We started with 2" x 2" boards that were cut to about 7', then secured at the top with a wood furring strip. This let the legs of the sawhorse move and lets us fold them up for storage and created a spot for the bamboo rail to fit on top.

Pine lumber seemed pretty bland, so we perked it up with a bright red paint and then a UV sealer.

The bamboo was already stained black, but I went over it again with a black stain that should protect the bamboo from the elements and extend it's usefullness.

Then the wind came up and blew the bamboo sticks over - 5 times.  I did alot of damp cloth dabbing and some retouching, but we finally got everything done and dried so we could assemble the sawhorses above the SIP bed boxes.

Setting the trellis legs in the planter
Placing the trellis in a planter box


It was so nice to finally haul our trellis sawhorses out to the garden and tuck them into the ends of the box.  The legs fit snugly against the corners of the SIP bed box and are wedged into place by the SIPs inside the raised bed.

Then we added the first bamboo pole across the top.  Things are moving along well at this point.








Attaching the bamboo side rails
Attaching the bamboo side rails




We added the bamboo side rails and the clamps.  This allows the side rails to be secure but not clamped down.  The slack lets you slide the side rails out if needed.










Trellis string lines
Adding the trellis guide lines



The last part is to add the trellis lines.  We used construction string, but in hindsight maybe the green twine would have been better.  It would not have been so....obvious.


The trellis line needs to be long enough to tie to the top bamboo bar loosely, and then hang down loosely and tie to one of the side bamboo rails.


We ended up with about 10 -14 lines per box, which means 5 - 7 lines per tomato plant.
Next I spent alot of time weaving the lines through the tomatoes to keep them upright and allow for airflow.



Tomatoes on trellis lines
Weaving tomatoes around the lines



Now the real work begins - training the tomatoes.  If I had been paying attention, I would have done this when the tomatoes were much smaller. 

If this approach works well this year, we'll use it again next year.  So far it looks like a good choice.








Early tomatoes



While adding the tall indeterminate tomato climbing lines, I noticed that the Nikolayev Yellow Cherry already had tomato clusters on it !  This tomato has thin leaves and doesn't look particularly healthy for a tomato - I was expecting big bulky leaves like the others - but this little guy doesnt' seem to need alot of leaves to perform.


We're keeping an eye on this one and hope the cherry tomatoes taste as good as it says they will.  The plant is already covered in blooms and we look forward to trying this one soon.


Tomato trellis in the garden





We have 4 tomatoes per SIP bed. 1 box with 2 determinates (short) and 1 box with 2 indeterminates (very long/tall) on each side of the arbor.








Tomatoes have plenty of climbing room now





The 8 tomato types we're trying this year.  The tomato descriptions can be found on the Tomatofest website

1. Azoychka
2. Gold Dust    
3. Heinz-9129
4. Japanese Black Trifele
5. Nikolayev Yellow Cherry
6. Sasha's Altai
7. Sunset Red Horizon
8. Zhefen Short


Finished trellis and guide lines







Our newly trussed up tomatoes enjoying the sun.


I'll let you know how the experiment goes over the summer.