I love tomatoes, tomatoes last several years have no taste and size. Tried fruit stands, same result.
What have they done them?
I love tomatoes, tomatoes last several years have no taste and size. Tried fruit stands, same result.
What have they done them?
I love tomatoes, tomatoes last several years have no taste and size. Tried fruit stands, same result.
What have they done them?
Just put some Dale’s on them and you won’t care.**I love tomatoes, tomatoes last several years have no taste and size. Tried fruit stands, same result.
What have they done them?
This is where the conspiracy theorists need to be focusing. What the aliens have done to my tomatoes is a travesty. They've selectively bred all taste and texture out of my tomatoes. I blame the Chinese MFers.
I love tomatoes, tomatoes last several years have no taste and size. Tried fruit stands, same result.
What have they done them?
My Daddy believed tomatoes had to be grown using cow **** as fertilizer. He always kept a couple of steers in a concrete floored enclosure for our butcher beef. The dried cow **** was periodically shoveled into a side shed for garden fertilizer. For those of you who didn’t grow up on a farm, you have no idea how much grass seed a cow can process. You had to hoe the maters every day. He would take square bales of hay and line end to end against the garden fence, he would hollow out a bowl in the middle of the bale and fill it with cow **** and plant tomatoes in it. He could grow tomatoes as big as grapefruit that actually tastes like a tomatoes. Tomatoes are bacons best friend.
Cherokee Purple, although racist, are the best tasting tomatoes.A few that still have great taste are: Cherokee Purple, Marion and Creole. The first two being heirlooms. I am not sure about Creole. I generally try about six different tomatoes a year, but I always include these three.
Cherokee Purple, although racist, are the best tasting tomatoes.
A few that still have great taste are: Cherokee Purple, Marion and Creole. The first two being heirlooms. I am not sure about Creole. I generally try about six different tomatoes a year, but I always include these three.
A few that still have great taste are: Cherokee Purple, Marion and Creole. The first two being heirlooms. I am not sure about Creole. I generally try about six different tomatoes a year, but I always include these three.
3-5 Cherokee purple plants are in our garden every year. Love em. They can be tough to discern when they are ripe, at least up here in Iowa, because of the different colors and varying firmness of each fruit.
https://www.seedsavers.org/cherokee-purple-organic-tomato
Temperature and humidity both affect tomato pollination. When temperatures rise above 85 to 90 degrees F (depending on humidity) during the day and 75 degrees F at night, flowers may fall without making tomatoes