vfem
Garden Addicted
I broke open a local magazine, something you can just grab at any news stand in Wake county NC. Its called Cary Living. (A snobby town I lived in briefly and will not return since they don't allow chickens or more then 2 dogs per household...but that is another story/vent for another time.)
To the point though, there is an article covering a Raleigh man, someone who didn't live far from where I lived before I moved outside of town. I do still live close to the area though, so I consider this neighboring!
The article "Raleigh Gardener Cultivates Reputation as Tomato Expert" by Dan Bain. The gardener, Craig LeHoullier. Some of you may know all this already, but I found it quite a shock.
Apparently, in 1990, while collecting seeds...which he had been doing since 1986 when he joined the Seed Savers Exchange... he received an envelope of unnamed, unmarked seeds from a family in Tennesse by the name of the Greens. The Green's told him that is was a purple colored tomato that had been passed down through the family with the story that the Cherokee nation had gifted these seeds to their family more then 100 years earlier.
LeHoullier grew the tomato, named it "Cherokee Purple" and then sent the seeds to multiple companies. It became so popular he created 2 more varieties and called them Cherokee Green and Cherokee Chocolate!!!
OMG! How crazy! I was just going crazy trying to find some of the Cherokee Purple's... and got some from Broke Down Ranch, who was kind enough to share some Cherokee Chocolate with me too.
Now I have a better sense of where they came from.
It was also nice to find out that his wife and he are at our local farmers market selling seedlings of rare varieties and almost extinct varieties he's been collecting and trying to get back out there.
Even better, they host an event each year called Tomatopalooza. Just visit www.Tomatopalooza.com to see where the location will be this year in July.
I'm going to have to go look this guy up and see if I can trade for one of the 3000-4000 varieties he claims to have in his home.
I found his page with seedling varieties they will have available for sale this coming season:
http://www.nctomatoman.topcities.com/From_The_Vine.htm
To the point though, there is an article covering a Raleigh man, someone who didn't live far from where I lived before I moved outside of town. I do still live close to the area though, so I consider this neighboring!
The article "Raleigh Gardener Cultivates Reputation as Tomato Expert" by Dan Bain. The gardener, Craig LeHoullier. Some of you may know all this already, but I found it quite a shock.
Apparently, in 1990, while collecting seeds...which he had been doing since 1986 when he joined the Seed Savers Exchange... he received an envelope of unnamed, unmarked seeds from a family in Tennesse by the name of the Greens. The Green's told him that is was a purple colored tomato that had been passed down through the family with the story that the Cherokee nation had gifted these seeds to their family more then 100 years earlier.
LeHoullier grew the tomato, named it "Cherokee Purple" and then sent the seeds to multiple companies. It became so popular he created 2 more varieties and called them Cherokee Green and Cherokee Chocolate!!!
OMG! How crazy! I was just going crazy trying to find some of the Cherokee Purple's... and got some from Broke Down Ranch, who was kind enough to share some Cherokee Chocolate with me too.
Now I have a better sense of where they came from.
It was also nice to find out that his wife and he are at our local farmers market selling seedlings of rare varieties and almost extinct varieties he's been collecting and trying to get back out there.
Even better, they host an event each year called Tomatopalooza. Just visit www.Tomatopalooza.com to see where the location will be this year in July.
I'm going to have to go look this guy up and see if I can trade for one of the 3000-4000 varieties he claims to have in his home.
I found his page with seedling varieties they will have available for sale this coming season:
http://www.nctomatoman.topcities.com/From_The_Vine.htm