What Is Wrong With Me? Tomato Problems: Catfacng

I’d like to do a series on problems all of us have from time to time when growing tomatoes. This week I answered a question about catfacing. (Please don’t run through the streets screaming in horror. Franken tomato happens to most of us at one time or another! )Below is an excellent article on possible causes. I am sharing it here. Click on the link below to read his/her take on catfacing. Thanks to The Tomato Bible.

https://www.tomatobible.com/tomato-catfacing/

Pretty ugly, right? There are multiple reasons that this could happen.

For one, many of the largest heirlooms are susceptible to this. You would never see this in retail. They want pretty, round, moderate-sized tomatoes.

A big reason could be the weather. Wide fluctuations of hot, cold, and warm, interfere with the flowers as they develop.

Another reason could be your watering practices. Inconsistent watering, too much, too little. I know it contributes to cracking on thin-skinned tomatoes.

Weather, we can’t control. The varieties we choose are something we can change, as well as how and when we water.

The good news? You will lose a lot of tomato when you trim the icky spots but the tomato is still very, very delicious! Hands down, they taste a lot better than the perfect, plastic ones at the store.

Just know that is isn’t usually something you did.

Two New Tomatoes To Me

Blue Beauty and Dancing with Surfs

Blue Beauty July 25th 2023

These tomatoes were part of my dark and unusual choices for this year. I was amazed at the size and coloring of the ‘Blue Beauty’. Very prolific, they all seemed to ripen at once (so far) and the plant isn’t too tall. Labeled as an indeterminate. A cross between ‘Beauty King’ and a blue tomato. This is a Brad Gates Introduction of Wild Boar Farm. He has come up with some doozies! His are the most colorful tomatoes around. It is also one of the first to ripen in my garden.

Dancing With Smurfs July 20 2023

Where does he come up with these names? These are about the size of a ping pong ball. They grow in clusters and are mature when they turn dark red with purplish shoulders. I liked them and thought they were fairly sweet when truly ripe. In my experience, blue tomatoes need to be really ripe for the best flavor. A tidy little plant, almost 4 feet in my garden.

I enjoy thumbing through the catalogs looking for new varieties every year. The more colorful the better!

Buying Tomato and Pepper Plants Early and How to Take Care of Them

Sometimes, in order to get the varieties you want, you just have to buy them earlier than you want, just to get them. I start my selling season on April 15th and no way can you put them out at that time.

Sometimes you want a certain variety such as Beauty King, Blush, Brad’s Atomic Grape, Cherokee Purple Heart, Vintage Wine, or Pruden’s Purple. Unless you grow them from seed you probably aren’t going to find them anywhere.

What about peppers? Try finding plants of Biquinho, Royal Black, Filius, Jalapeno Tajin, or Lemon Drop at a farmer’s market.

My customers who are savvy come early so they can get the more unusual or rare varieties. Naturally, they need to know how to keep them happy. So I school them n the dos and don’ts of what to do.

#1 Available real estate. When you buy a plant check the root ball. It may fill the pot and you will need to transplant them into a bigger pot to keep them growing. One of the reasons that I start some really early and put them into a gallon-size pot. Real Estate is everything for a plant. Below is the same variety of petunia. One was transplanted into a larger pot, and the other stayed in its old container. The difference is amazing.

#2 They need light. You can’t put them in your garage or basement with a lightbulb and consider it good. Even a bright window is not going to be satisfactory for any length of time. They need to go outside and get used to the weather. that being said if it is going to be over 40 at night when you set them out, leave them out. Also, watch out for wind and hail. If you buy a lot, consider putting them in a wagon or a sled or (use your creativity) and bring them out all at once rather than one at a time.

#3 They will need water. The nice thing about a bigger pot is that there is more soil volume and they don’t dry out as fast. In a smaller container, you really need to keep an eye on their water requirements.

#4 They will get hungry. we use a lot of organic amendments in our potting soil so they are set when we transplant but due to leaching (continuous watering dilutes the fertilizer every time you water), they will need more fertilizer be it organic or non-organic. Use the fertilizer you like, organic, non-organic, miracle-gro, or fish emulsion at half-strength every couple of weeks when you water. Light green tomato plants are especially unattractive.

Check out Progression of Pepper Plant Growth

It always amazes me how fast my plants grow. When they are first transplanted they just sort of sit there for a couple of weeks. Then, when their roots are feeling a little more settled, they start to put on growth. I am going to take pictures at regular intervals so that you see what I see in my greenhouse. I will do the same thing with the tomatoes.

There are four pics of the Jalapenos from 3 different dates. the others just represent the beauty of the little plants.

One of These Things Is Not Like The Other!

It’s been a while since I posted. Just trying to get my health and my mind back. Spring may have sprung somewhere but not here yet, even so, I have been busy in the greenhouse. I hope to share all of that with you. Thought I’d start out with something simple. We started our peppers back in January. I have to say that they are the best peppers I’ve ever grown! I would swear by the LED lights we purchased from Barina on Amazon

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=barrina&crid=3GACK3JDA1B5Z&sprefix=barrina%2Caps%2C170&ref=nb_sb_noss_1.

As I was hovering over the seed trays looking at all the life that popped up I saw something I didn’t recognize, at least it didn’t look like a pepper leaf. This was, of course after they grew their first true leaves. Hmmmm. didn’t know what to make of it since we had not opened a tomato seed packet at all! Just pepper seeds. Well, I don’t know what it is or where it came from so since it seemed like a plucky little thing, we transplanted it into a regular pot. It looked like the Ugly Duckling sort of thing. Not ugly really, just definitely not a pepper. I am going to grow it out and hopefully, it will be some magical, fabulous-tasting tomato.

Our peppers in progress as of March 7th, this one is called Super Khi

What I want you to get out of this is that mistakes don’t always happen in my hands. Often, from a seed packet, we will have plants that are supposed to have a potato leaf and not a regular leaf. those are the easy ones to differentiate. I have had as much as a 50/50 difference in the seedlings. Where I feel bad is when a customer gets something he didn’t bargain for such as a cherry tomato, not a beefsteak. Sometimes it’s a happy accident. Our friends had an oxheart and not a Cherokee Purple. didn’t know what it was although we had some guesses and he saved the seed which we are growing this year in the hopes it will be the same. They waxed rhapsodically over the sandwiches they had from this particular plant. Who knew? You really don’t know until it fruits. Sometimes I can tell the difference between a short little dwarf and an indeterminate or it may have bluish-green leaves or even a differently shaped leaf such as the Silvery Fir Tree. Other than that, your guess is as good as mine.

Everybody’s favorite, Jalapeno. Last year we had almost nothing in the Jalapeno catagory. this year we have 10 different varieties!

Even though we try hard to keep things straight, it happens. In my business, I always will replace the errant plant Personally, can’t imagine how difficult it must be to keep seeds straight out in the field. And collecting and preparing them for seed packets, what a job!

Islander
Giant Marconi and Long Red Cayenne