Large fruited Container suitable varieties
Last Year I flukes out and had great luck with
EM Champion ....I grew it because it was an " early " but the heart shaped fruit were Large . The notion of large fruited container varieties caught my attention . I checked Tatiana's Tomatobase site for new large fruited "container suitable" listings .. There seem to be more offerings this year .. EM Champion Brandy Fred Dwarf Emerald Giant Loxton Ladd Krasnador Titians Zinulya Does anyone have any experience with these or other varieties you think would fit in with this group ?..... of Large fruited Container suitable varieties ? |
Besides EM Champion there are some other Siberian determinate tomato varieties with large fruit:
Rozovyi Myod (=Pink Honey in English) Danko Velmozha Kanopus Gina Tolstyi Jack (=Fat Jack in English) Shtambovyi Krupnoplodnyi (=Tree-type Large-fruited in English) |
[QUOTE=Andrey_BY;556834]Besides EM Champion there are some other Siberian determinate tomato varieties with large fruit:
Rozovyi Myod (=Pink Honey in English) Danko Velmozha Kanopus Gina Tolstyi Jack (=Fat Jack in English) Shtambovyi Krupnoplodnyi (=Tree-type Large-fruited in English)[/QUOTE] Hey ! thanks that's just enough info . to study further and possibly get me into more Tomato trouble for 2017 ....LOL :roll: I will follow this info up ...Thanks ! |
You can grow large tomato plants (and large fruits) in a container...no problem. Bigger is better....when it comes to containers. I use 20 gallon Husky trash containers. They work great! (drill holes)
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I was mostly thinking of 5 or 7 or 10 gallon containers ......
as this size was theoretically possible to move to a protected environment in Fall to extend the Tomato season . I got a real deal on some Keter garden plastic containers 10 gallon and 7 gallon drill some holes in bottom and they work out great ! I also have a few of the trash can size (20 gallon +) ...complete with wheels (drill holes etc. ) I have some Gregori's Altai and Cosmonait Volkov and EM champion with Unikalnyi planted in those sizes . |
I think for 2017 I will order /procure some :
Velmozha Brandy fred Loxton Ladd Krasnador Titans Zinulya LOL That should be more than enough Tomato ....for the next 5 years LOL |
[QUOTE=BlackBear;557057]I was mostly thinking of 5 or 7 or 10 gallon containers ......
as this size was theoretically possible to move to a protected environment in Fall to extend the Tomato season . I got a real deal on some Keter garden plastic containers 10 gallon and 7 gallon drill some holes in bottom and they work out great ! I also have a few of the trash can size (20 gallon +) ...complete with wheels (drill holes etc. ) I have some Gregori's Altai and Cosmonait Volkov and EM champion with Unikalnyi planted in those sizes .[/QUOTE] G.A and C.V. do really well in containers. B. f Tula too. I grow all of mine in containers and they dig it. |
Cosmonaut Volkov is rather vigorous for containers. Usually 1.5-2m high.
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[QUOTE=Andrey_BY;557111]Cosmonaut Volkov is rather vigorous for containers. Usually 1.5-2m high.[/QUOTE]
Its hard to go to far wrong with Cosmonaut Volkov even with cool weather . |
[QUOTE=Andrey_BY;557111]Cosmonaut Volkov is rather vigorous for containers. Usually 1.5-2m high.[/QUOTE]
I like them that way Andrey. And 2.30 m or so is about the limit of where I can reach without a ladder. CV sure tastes great to me, and with a little water restriction/dry farming it boosts the flavor to the outstanding range. |
Indian Stripe is one that does very well in smaller containers. Size is around 220g, pretty good but not huge. Very compact plant for the production.
But yeah, in 7 gal about anything can be grown by growing to single stem. Height is the concern here so using big fruited dwarfs does make sense. I got 4 tomatoes last year over one pound from one plant (along with many more smaller) in 7 gal. In not big containers you need to maximize production vs plant size imo for great results. Huge plants will get stunted faster. |
Any variety will work in a container, I used to grow in 15-20 gallon, then 10, now 6.
Keep them watered, and production is super, keep them healthy and the taste of the fruit is amazing too. I will grow 800-1000 plants this year, about 80 varieties, everything from a cherry to huge beefsteaks. PIECE OF CAKE |
What Mark said. High, high, high maintenance outdoors but it can be done. Will require at least daily watering when it is hot, lots of fertilizer and TLC. It is more difficult outdoors than in a greenhouse due to wind, rain, heat, critters, bugs and disease that are not as easily controlled. Bigger the pot the easier it is.
I have grown lots of big beefsteaks in pots and it works just fine if you dedicate the energy they need for their upkeep. most especially H20. Not able to leave them for a long weekend away when it's hot though unless you have somebody who will look after them for you KarenO |
Great advice Karen, and I would like to add to our posts. Use a drip system on a timer if watering is a concern, also buy a couple injectors, or use two tanks for fertilizer, then you have continuous feed, which is superior to once a week feedings.
Your taste will improve as the health of the plants improve, and you will have little stress. |
Thanks for all the input all ...wow ..
I am very close to making the next step for premix ...fertilizer ..H20 system etc. But that is a big step ......but my own Tomato seed stock varieties is now appox. 200 and at moment takes 3 growing years to rotate through all if I wanted I guess a hobby needs wings ....LOL Will have to order a some of the previously mentioned Large fruited from Tatiana`s Today . :) |
[QUOTE=Andrey_BY;556834]Besides EM Champion there are some other Siberian determinate tomato varieties with large fruit:
Rozovyi Myod (=Pink Honey in English) Danko Velmozha Kanopus Gina Tolstyi Jack (=Fat Jack in English) Shtambovyi Krupnoplodnyi (=Tree-type Large-fruited in English)[/QUOTE] Hey Thanks Andrey !....... I did choose Velmozha this year to partner up with EM Champion ...... Both are No#1 Favorites for this year now 2017 ...... Great Tips !...:yes: |
[QUOTE=BlackBear;557357]Thanks for all the input all ...wow ..
I am very close to making the next step for premix ...fertilizer ..H20 system etc. But that is a big step ......but my own Tomato seed stock varieties is now appox. 200 and at moment takes 3 growing years to rotate through all if I wanted I guess a hobby needs wings ....LOL Will have to order a some of the previously mentioned Large fruited from Tatiana`s Today . :)[/QUOTE] Bah ! then I had to move for more central location and great opportunity . so While garden ..continued all plans were reset and delayed at least 6-9 months. |
Prudens Purple in a container
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I grew Prudens Purple in a container this year. It is about give me tomatoes very soon.
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pruden's purple is on my list of to ty etc. LOl
[LIST] [*]let us:cute: all know how it goes this year.[/LIST] |
I will do that.
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Mylanta! How big a bucket you got? Nice.
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The pot was a tree pot and is 18 inches across and 15 inches high. Here a view of the other side of the plant.
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No heirloom is more productive for me than Crnkovic Yugoslavian. This one is 2-stem in a 10gal poly bag and currently +30 golf ball to soft ball size fruit set. Catfacing or BER on less than 5% of the toms has been my experience over the last 2 seasons.
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WOWSERS !:dizzy::?:
Great example ! |
Berkley Tie Die Pink is very good for containers. It's not particularly small but not huge either. It has the advantage that it doesn't have the usual problems of container growing (magnesium deficiency and micronutrients).
First truss this year: 12 fruits softball size perfectly shaped (3 kg from that one truss), had to support it with 3 additional strings. The production potential is lower than Crnkovic (nothing really is higher) but it is definitely more beginner friendly. It does have some slight BER tendency but not too bad. And the taste is top 3 (if you prefer a more acidic bite). |
Prudens Purple Plant
Hi Blackbear,
Never mind about the Prudens Purple in a container. This is my first year growing it and I have noticed by looking at YouTube and other photos that it does not look like a potato leaf variety. It also has a great big green Oxheart tomato coming in. I went by the label on the seed packet. Looks like another hybrid tomato plant. Oh well, it will be eaten by me and probably the neighbors who have been eyeing the tomato plant and asking me about it. Wish I could have given you a good tomato plant reference. |
[QUOTE=Psalms441;657301]Hi Blackbear,
Never mind about the Prudens Purple in a container. This is my first year growing it and I have noticed by looking at YouTube and other photos that it does not look like a potato leaf variety. It also has a great big green Oxheart tomato coming in. I went by the label on the seed packet. Looks like another hybrid tomato plant. Oh well, it will be eaten by me and probably the neighbors who have been eyeing the tomato plant and asking me about it. Wish I could have given you a good tomato plant reference.[/QUOTE] lol :lol: ....I am not to quick on the draw here .... looks interesting ..non the less :yes:;) |
ExtraExtra Large Container Tomatoes Shipped
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Here are some extra extra Large container tomatoes being shipped by container up the pacific coast :)8-)
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Not sure how large you mean by large fruited variety, but I have grown Sophies Choice and Azoychoka in those size containers and they produce very well.
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[QUOTE=SueCT;657663]Not sure how large you mean by large fruited variety, but I have grown Sophies Choice and Azoychoka in those size containers and they produce very well.[/QUOTE]
to me Sophies ia a must be grown every year ... there is always space for it ..:yes: I will be re-trying Azoychka next year as well ..:) |
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