Tomato-tastic!
We bought a little 7w heated propagator the other day to start off our tomatoes, chillies and aubergines at home. Last year we couldn't start off our seeds until quite late in the season and with the rubbish rainy summer they didn't really get far enough along, a lot never ripened at all. We got something off them, but the real stars were the tiny 80p plants we bought (Shirley, Golden Sunrise, and a Plum I think) .
So the plan this year is to get the plants from our seeds to a similar size before taking them to the allotment. We decided to try 2 of each of our heritage seeds from last year first, we had 4 seeds of each left and had slow and patchy germination last year: Vintage Wine, which is a kind of knobbly stripy one ; Banana Cream, which has long 'plum' type yellow fruits; Christmas Grape, which produces vines of small cherry toms; and Lemon Tree, which has surprisingly lemon looking fruit, right down to the point at the end!
And so far 2 of each of everything except the Banana Cream have come up. In just a week. The Banana Cream took longer than all the others to come up last year, so I expect that to pop up in a few days. Then we will stick them in a normal propagator, and then pots, and try and them get a bit bigger ready for transferring to the allotment.
Next on the list are: Red Robin tomatoes, little bushes of cherry ones; Purple Calabash, lovely knobbly dark red/black ones; Bolivian Rainbow chillies, and Money Maker aubergines.
Here is hoping for a good crop this year.
4 comments:
I hope the gardening season is a better one for you this year. The rain was a common complaint there last summer.
Thanks, Kate, We had a beautiful and warm April here, it promised so much, but it turned out that it was pretty much all the summer we got.
Hope we all get a bit more sun this year.
My heated propagator really helps get an early start to the season. A word of caution though, they can get leggy and spindly if too warm and not enough daylight.
Yes, they are getting a little leggy now. So, we have whipped the top off and plan to move them on into little pots in the next couple of days.
At least the good things with leggy tomato seedlings is that the stems can be planted deep to allow more roots to form off them!
I'm looking forward to doing the chillies and other tomatoes next.
Post a Comment