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Old July 23, 2015   #76
BigVanVader
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Cool I cant wait, I feel the same about Fred's varieties too.
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Old July 23, 2015   #77
Fred Hempel
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Spike is definitely a "gardener's" tomato. Great right off the vine, but too soft for packing and marketing.
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Old July 24, 2015   #78
Cole_Robbie
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leftovers from a slow market the day before yesterday, they should sell tomorrow: http://i.imgur.com/JQydVb1.jpg

and my first Shadow Boxing: http://i.imgur.com/jXYTDZT.jpg
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Old July 24, 2015   #79
Cole_Robbie
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Green Doctor's Frosted: http://i.imgur.com/FtBEqeZ.jpg

They are very sweet. I like them a lot better than Sungreen.
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Old July 25, 2015   #80
Cole_Robbie
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A cut up Jazz I had for lunch: http://i.imgur.com/qdGNUfb.jpg
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Old July 26, 2015   #81
Cole_Robbie
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I spoke too soon regarding the Count Orlov's Yellow. I think I tried it before it was fully ripe. It is much more of an orange tomato than a yellow one. It also has an unusual firmness and shelf life for an heirloom. The firmness is actually kind of nice; it's not overbearingly hard like a commercial variety. I'm saving seeds and will grow it again.
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Old July 28, 2015   #82
natural
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Cole, glad to hear that Orlov improved for you. I was worried for awhile that I had given you a dud.
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Old July 30, 2015   #83
Cole_Robbie
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Me too! Thanks again.

I really liked Shadow Boxing. It is sweet, juicy, and has heirloom-quality flavor.

http://i.imgur.com/UXpKaCl.jpg

That pic isn't the greatest, but the fruit are very pretty.
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Old August 1, 2015   #84
Cole_Robbie
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I tasted my first Paul Robeson today. I can see why it has such a great flavor reputation. It is the juiciest tomato I have had this summer, outside of the dwarfs. I can also see the resemblance to my favorite dwarf from last year, Tasmanian Chocolate, which is Paul Robeson x New Big Dwarf. The two varieties taste very similar.

And on the topic of me trying all the "sun" varieties of cherries this year, Sun Peach is the one standout winner that I will definitely order again. Sun Chocola did well until the stink bugs wiped them out. Sun Lemon was a heavy yielder, but I lost too many fruit to whitefly damage. Sun Green never lived up to expectations; the fruit were never sweet. My Green Doctor's Frosted looked exactly the same, and tasted much better, a night and day difference.
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Old August 11, 2015   #85
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This is going to be my last pic and review of the year, as I am pulling out all my plants right not to plant a fall garden.

I was disappointed in Peiping Chieh, but as I was pulling out the two plants I had, I picked quite a few fruit off of them: http://i.imgur.com/PTgXgaF.jpg

After tasting it, I couldn't let it go. I will be saving seeds for this variety as well. It is an old variety, ugly, prone to catfacing and irregular fruit, some BER, and late in the season to mature. But the flavor is just too good to let it go.
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Old August 12, 2015   #86
Labradors2
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I hope you are still going to post your top ten favourites as I'm very interested to hear what they are. Pretty please?

Linda
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Old September 14, 2015   #87
Cole_Robbie
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The more I think about it, the harder it gets to define "best" in regard to anything. Some are best to eat, others best to sell. Some varieties are great in good weather but not the best in bad weather. Then there's best by size and by color. I would end up with a lot of lists.

Warren's Yellow Cherry is my best volunteer. It's my last plant, still going strong. Fruit will crack in wet weather, but it is very prolific:
http://i.imgur.com/0ZbvaIj.jpg

I pruned the bottom by running over it with a lawn mower. That was a week or so ago. The plant didn't seem to mind.
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Old September 14, 2015   #88
MendozaMark
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cole_Robbie View Post
The more I think about it, the harder it gets to define "best" in regard to anything. Some are best to eat, others best to sell. Some varieties are great in good weather but not the best in bad weather. Then there's best by size and by color. I would end up with a lot of lists.

Warren's Yellow Cherry is my best volunteer. It's my last plant, still going strong. Fruit will crack in wet weather, but it is very prolific:
http://i.imgur.com/0ZbvaIj.jpg

I pruned the bottom by running over it with a lawn mower. That was a week or so ago. The plant didn't seem to mind.
Maybe when you start to finalize your list for 2016 season(s), you could update us on what's making a return for market and/or personal use.

I was also interested in if you grow the same varieties in Spring as in Fall ?
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