digitS'
Garden Master
In the garden -- here are a couple examples of what what unexpectedly happened.
I am always trying to find tomato varieties that can produce well, be early and ripen their crop in a normal season. Bloody Butcher can do that. I've seen it described as a little tomato with a big tomato flavor - I think that's right! It is also VERY EARLY to ripen fruit.
Bloody Butcher should be in my garden every year. (My wife hates the name so we call it "Jolly Rancher" and she is more comfortable with that .)
A couple years ago, the greenhouse was terribly overcrowded with plant starts and I set a whole lot of tomato seedlings out in an unheated plastic tunnel. Overnight, the temperature in that tunnel fell to 37F. The seedlings had never been out of a heated greenhouse once during their short lives. Many of them wilted and a few of them died - at 37!
I know it was 37 because the thermometer was in the middle of the tunnel - beside the Bloody Butchers. The only plants that ALL died were the Bloody Butchers. I had several hundred plants and a couple dozen varieties in that tunnel. Some lost leaves but only those very early-maturing Bloody Butchers died! I didn't expect that!
In 2011, I tried Dagma's Perfection. I figured that any improvement that Gary Ibsen could make to this heirloom and then - name after his wife - had to be a good tomato. It seemed to have an early enough days-to-maturity rating. I started some seeds!
By July, I figured I had made a big mistake. The plants would flower but just NOT set fruit! Then, hot summer weather set in. We usually have some very hot weeks during late July and into August. The dry sunny weather continued into September and those Perfection plants ripened fruit like crazy! It was the same story this year - nothing on those plants until SUDDENLY, they were covered with fruit!
So, here is an early-maturing variety that CANNOT set fruit in cool weather . . . I didn't expect that!
How about in your tomato patch or gardening generally -- what has been unexpected???
Steve
I am always trying to find tomato varieties that can produce well, be early and ripen their crop in a normal season. Bloody Butcher can do that. I've seen it described as a little tomato with a big tomato flavor - I think that's right! It is also VERY EARLY to ripen fruit.
Bloody Butcher should be in my garden every year. (My wife hates the name so we call it "Jolly Rancher" and she is more comfortable with that .)
A couple years ago, the greenhouse was terribly overcrowded with plant starts and I set a whole lot of tomato seedlings out in an unheated plastic tunnel. Overnight, the temperature in that tunnel fell to 37F. The seedlings had never been out of a heated greenhouse once during their short lives. Many of them wilted and a few of them died - at 37!
I know it was 37 because the thermometer was in the middle of the tunnel - beside the Bloody Butchers. The only plants that ALL died were the Bloody Butchers. I had several hundred plants and a couple dozen varieties in that tunnel. Some lost leaves but only those very early-maturing Bloody Butchers died! I didn't expect that!
In 2011, I tried Dagma's Perfection. I figured that any improvement that Gary Ibsen could make to this heirloom and then - name after his wife - had to be a good tomato. It seemed to have an early enough days-to-maturity rating. I started some seeds!
By July, I figured I had made a big mistake. The plants would flower but just NOT set fruit! Then, hot summer weather set in. We usually have some very hot weeks during late July and into August. The dry sunny weather continued into September and those Perfection plants ripened fruit like crazy! It was the same story this year - nothing on those plants until SUDDENLY, they were covered with fruit!
So, here is an early-maturing variety that CANNOT set fruit in cool weather . . . I didn't expect that!
How about in your tomato patch or gardening generally -- what has been unexpected???
Steve