digitS'
Garden Master
Ridgerunner did such a good job with those answers, I am almost shy about weighing-in again . . .
Both determinants and indeterminants have been in my garden. Some of the early-maturing determinants have upset me by running thru their harvest before I was ready to see them go! But really, that's how they are supposed to behave.
I am just so delighted to have ripening tomatoes that when they are ripe and then GONE -- they leave me with that candy-from-a-baby feeling .
One of the determinants that actually has time to run thru its full life-cycle in my garden is Gold Nugget. This is an open-pollinated cherry that is just incredibly early and very productive. Gold Nugget isn't incredibly sweet however - that might be more in the realm of the hybrids. There will be all these golden cherries on a fairly small plant! Then the plant will begin to weaken . . .
I use the term "open-pollinated" (OP) rather than "heirloom" because Gold Nugget was developed just a few years ago. There are quite a few definitions for "heirloom" - you could almost make up your own .
Other OP cherries have been in my garden. I don't think any of them can match the sweetness of some hybrids. Sugar Lump is a misnomer in my opinion. I liked it - it has lots of flavor but I couldn't get DW to eat it .
Large Red Cherry was in my garden for decades. I don't know whether to recommend that one or not. It is rated about 70 days-to-maturity, so it ripens early enuf. You may want to look very closely at what will ripen in your area. Many larger heirlooms are 80 days and more. I don't bother with 'em . . .
Steve
Both determinants and indeterminants have been in my garden. Some of the early-maturing determinants have upset me by running thru their harvest before I was ready to see them go! But really, that's how they are supposed to behave.
I am just so delighted to have ripening tomatoes that when they are ripe and then GONE -- they leave me with that candy-from-a-baby feeling .
One of the determinants that actually has time to run thru its full life-cycle in my garden is Gold Nugget. This is an open-pollinated cherry that is just incredibly early and very productive. Gold Nugget isn't incredibly sweet however - that might be more in the realm of the hybrids. There will be all these golden cherries on a fairly small plant! Then the plant will begin to weaken . . .
I use the term "open-pollinated" (OP) rather than "heirloom" because Gold Nugget was developed just a few years ago. There are quite a few definitions for "heirloom" - you could almost make up your own .
Other OP cherries have been in my garden. I don't think any of them can match the sweetness of some hybrids. Sugar Lump is a misnomer in my opinion. I liked it - it has lots of flavor but I couldn't get DW to eat it .
Large Red Cherry was in my garden for decades. I don't know whether to recommend that one or not. It is rated about 70 days-to-maturity, so it ripens early enuf. You may want to look very closely at what will ripen in your area. Many larger heirlooms are 80 days and more. I don't bother with 'em . . .
Steve