Gardening
Related: About this forumWell, it's not the Cover of the Rolling Stone - but it's the NYT! web live this AM
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/16/realestate/tomato-growing-tips.html/I know there is a paywall - will put the first 4 para below
It will be in the print version on Sunday
By Margaret Roach
Feb. 16, 2022, 5:00 a.m. ET
We are the luckiest tomato growers in all of history, proclaimed Craig LeHoullier as he thumbed with dramatic effect through the Seed Savers Exchange yearbook, a hefty index of nearly 12,000 heirloom varieties of the beloved Solanum lycopersicum.
Choosing among such a staggering selection of tomatoes, plus hundreds of modern hybrids not included in that print version of the yearbook, is the first step toward your best-ever harvest or what Dr. LeHoullier, a retired chemist who has grown perhaps 3,000 varieties, calls epic tomatoes.
And reaching that goal does not start with just any old tomato that the local big-box store serves up as transplants by the truckload.
Epic Tomatoes: How to Select and Grow the Best Varieties of All Time is Dr. LeHoulliers 2014 book, now in its seventh printing, with about 80,000 copies in print. And Growing Epic Tomatoes is the name of an online course that he teaches with his friend Joe Lampl, the host for 12 years of the Emmy Award-winning public television program Growing a Greener World.
snip
hedda_foil
(16,502 posts)2naSalit
(92,710 posts)Congrats!
mopinko
(71,813 posts)congrats my old friend. you earned it.
farmbo
(3,139 posts)Keep on Growing!
Solly Mack
(92,820 posts)blm
(113,820 posts)luvs2sing
(2,234 posts)But the deer are already gathering and licking their chops at the mere thought of our ever growing tomatoes again.
Congratulations!
Lonestarblue
(11,830 posts)But trying to grow anything like tomatoes or salad greens is futile. And what the deer dont get, the squirrels do. Squirrels plop down in the herb bins and much away. They love Italian parsley!
luvs2sing
(2,234 posts)is the black swallowtail caterpillars, and Im more than happy to share my small crop with them. The deer are no longer an adorable novelty. They are a nuisance, and its an overcrowding situation thats unhealthy for them and aggravating for humans. They even ate our garlic!
niyad
(119,935 posts)is in constant circulation.
CaptainTruth
(7,219 posts)Hekate
(94,665 posts)packman
(16,296 posts)I once figured it out that the two good tomatoes I grew that one year, before surrendering them to bugs and assorted blight, cost me about $12 each. True, I enjoyed the daily care, feeding, weeding, spraying , and seeing them grow - but still.
7wo7rees
(5,128 posts)barbtries
(29,794 posts)Congratulations Craig.
steventh
(2,156 posts)"Epic Tomatoes" is one of my favorite gardening books, along with "Square Foot Gardening." I hope the NYT article (which I can't see behind the paywall) also mentioned your excellent work with dwarf tomatoes.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,727 posts)I can't even begin to imagine.
I tried growing tomatoes a couple of years ago, and was spectacularly unsuccessful. Quite discouraging, as there's nothing better than a vine-ripened tomato.
mgardener
(1,895 posts)I grow Polish Linguisa and Olpaka tomatoes for sauces and salsa.
They do so well in our Zone 4.
cbabe
(4,163 posts)Thats true love and homegrown tomatoes.
Guy Clark, Homegrown Tomatoes
(Some kind person post the live from Austin YouTube? Thanks!)
babylonsister
(171,610 posts)Farmer-Rick
(11,407 posts)I grow really good tomatoes until late or early blight hits them.
Botany
(72,483 posts)NBachers
(18,132 posts)2Gingersnaps
(1,000 posts)Congrats!
highplainsdem
(52,367 posts)BobTheSubgenius
(11,789 posts)I am very surprised once again.
A friend of ours that could grow a plant from a dry stick gave me a few heirloom tomato varieties. A few I didn't really care for - not that I didn't like them, they just weren't impressive - but a couple were absolutely delicious. Not big fruit producers though, so not commercially viable, except for a few boutique-type restaurants.
R Merm
(426 posts)NewHendoLib
(60,501 posts)people
(697 posts)Congratulations and thank you for your beautiful book. Just thinking about buying tomato seeds when I saw this. Am pulling your book off the shelf now.
Gore1FL
(21,887 posts)niyad
(119,935 posts)hippywife
(22,767 posts)Congrats!
Grasswire2
(13,708 posts)I still remember the taste of the Mexico Midgets you sent me.
Very cool!
live love laugh
(14,408 posts)Theyre at their peak then and so delicious.
I wish I could grow my own but I lack the talent.
Congratulations!🍾
7wo7rees
(5,128 posts)Every farmers market I go to where I have opportunity to talk to growers of tomatoes, I tell them of you
I rec to them your book.
I absolutely love you and your wife and your writing of "retirement" in North Carolina. Reads like heaven and then some!!
Oh yes, 7wo7rees mom and pop live in Pinehurst, NC.
Retirement on golf course did not work out quite as planned.......