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Tuesday, August 3, 2010

I HAVE GRANDBABIES.... of the Garden Kind!

Well.... what do you call the fruit from the suckers rooted from your tomato plants?

The cherry tomato plant of unknown variety that I have dubbed "the Energizer Bunny" continues to produce. I have now harvested 201 tomatoes from this plant and it continues to go strong. I have had to be creative in staking it since it was NEVER supposed to get this big. I think it likes being planted next to my okra.




And now the suckers that I rooted earlier in the season have fruit and the first one is starting to ripen. YEAH!


I actually have 2 suckers that have fruit. In the picture below, the suckers are in the front and the original plant is in the back.


I hope the sucker plants produce like the original plant. AND... I hope that if I save seeds I will get more of this plant next year.

Enjoy more gardens at the Tuesday Garden Party and Oh, How My Garden Grows.

Blessings,

Debbie


 

13 comments:

  1. I have read somewhere that you can root the original plant for next year instead of hoping the seeds will produce the same sort of plant. I have never tried it, but I might this year!

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  2. Linda, I was just telling my husband that I think I will try to root one of the suckers later in the fall and see if I can keep it alive inside during the winter. You never know unless you try and part of the fun in gardening is the experiments.

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  3. You can save the seed and get the same plant if the plant was not a hybrid. Seeds saved from hybrids will not produce the same plant. I only grow true heirloom varieties of vegetables here.

    Let us know how you make out with rooting a sucker for the winter.

    Your cantaloupe on Harvest Monday looked very very yummy!

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  4. 201 tomatoes--that's a ton of tomatoes! I am so looking forward to our first red, ripe tomato here!

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  5. Hey - nothing like some totally free tomatoes! :) I have some volunteer gourds growing in the garden now that are going gang busters. They are actually looking better than anything I planted from seeds!

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  6. Just Trying To Save More... Thanks!

    Robin... I will let you know how it goes trying to root the tomato suckers over the winter. Can't hurt to try since our winters are shorter here in the South.

    Athena... I am so happy I decided to keep count of the tomatoes. These are cherry tomatoes and my youngest son can make a dozen or more disappear before I can blink my eyes.

    Melinda... I am noticed this morning that the suckers from my Roma tomatoes have started setting fruit!! YEAH!

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  7. Congratulations on your tomato grand babies! That is so exciting that your replanted suckers are now producing fruit. I fully support your plans for garden experiments, I'm all about experimenting myself!

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  8. Thyme... I will let you know how it goes. I am still hoping to save seeds to share even though the seeds will be an experiment, too, since I don't know if this is a hybrid.

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  9. wow! That's a very productive plant. My cherry tomatoes are huge, but they haven't started to turn red yet:(

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  10. I've never even thought of rooting suckers. Our season is so short here, though, that I doubt I'd ever have "grandbabies." :-)

    Thanks for sharing at the TGP.

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  11. 201 tomatoes! Wow and wow! That is amazing.

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  12. First I need to identify "suckers", then maybe it will be another gratifying experience to plant them :o).

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