July 7 - garden notes - LOTS happening, but the best is yet to come

The expected yellow leaves, and immature white fruit, on Blazey F4 selection dwarf, one of my many mysteries

A garden is a complex thing. One one had, there are times when it seems little changes day to day. But a bit more thought reveals that an awful lot is actually going on. As our garden turned from June to July, it - and me - are already feeling a bit of that hot summer day, lazy torpor that prevents action being taken when it is needed - removing the blemished leaves, feeding or watering on schedule, applying that big ball of twine to tame plants.

Over the past few weeks, here are a few things that have been happening in our big back yard garden.

Snap Beans - we’ve been enjoying so our nightly big plates of fresh beans, boiled until al dente, served with butter, chives, salt and pepper - the ultimate finger food appetizer. I noticed that the plants were looking a bit tired and the nightly pickings diminishing significantly. So - a few days ago all but two varieties were yanked out and those areas cultivated a bit and reseeded. I focused on two varieties - Marbel and Jade. I am hoping for quick germination, and then to fill in any blank spaces quickly - the goal being another round of delicious treats well prior to the sun no longer being optimum for the location of the bean strawbales. I also wanted to get on top of seed saving for two rare varieties that are favorites, so 10 gallon containers were seeded with Marbel and Fowler.

Squash - the squash avalanche continues, but is slowing a bit. The plants are maintaining their health and vigor. I am about to thin two big triple plant bales to single plants to provide some breathing room, as well as assess the condition of all of the plants in general. It may be time to free up two of the four bales and reseed to provide consistent squash until frost.

Cucumbers - We are in love with the hybrid variety Unagi - it has all of the flavor and texture attributes of our former favorite, Diva, but with more length and more disease resistance. The two hills of cukes have been really prolific, with only a bit of disease showing up. Once again, I will have to decide if it is time to pull the plants and reseed - that decision will have to be very soon.

Potatoes - the vines are still largely green, but flopping over. Flowers never did form. I have four 20 gallon containers, and have to decide if it is time to dump one out and explore formation of the potatoes. It is approaching 100 days from planting, so it may be time - at least we would have some nice new Yukon Golds to enjoy. If the yield is reasonable, I will try some more colorful, unusual varieties next year - growing them was so easy, using straw from last year’s bales.

Rhubarb - we’ve enjoyed using it for strawberry, later blueberry, crisp desserts. It may be time to let the plants just leaf out and strengthen the crown. Having the three plants in large containers worked very well, providing us with all we need.

Lettuce - Somehow, despite the heat, the lettuce soldiers on. We probably have two weeks of salads remaining before the plants bolt and get pulled. Having our own lettuce is such a joy.

Garlic - long pulled, it is gathered and hanging in the garage, curing nicely. We ended up with about 30 big, plump bulbs, which will give us plenty to eat and some to replant in our raised beds in September (which is racing at us, it seems!).

Eggplants - we are about to harvest our first, and are thinking ratatouille with our squash and canned tomatoes from last year. The plants look great - growing them in straw bales is working beautifully, as expected. I am hoping for effective seed saving from all five varieties.

Peppers - also looking excellent, with fruit set on all varieties. Once again, straw bale growing was the key to returning to a successful effort. I really need to get some good quality ripe fruit from the various bell varieties from my dehybridizing efforts. We are a few weeks away from picking the sweet ones, but not nearly as long with Pinata jalapeno, and Padron and Shishito.

Tomatoes - our daughter Caitlin visited over last weekend, and spent hours working the plants - removing the blemished leaves and tying the unruly stems to the stakes. The main disappointments so far - a Moby family dwarf which produced so-so medium sized yellow tomatoes went down hard to Fusarium wilt. One of the Mortgage Lifters and a Lilly family dwarf loaded with striped tomatoes may be about to suffer the same plight. The straw bale indeterminates are looking really good, with plenty of fruit set. The other disappointment is seeing that Cherokee Green is turning out to be scarlet red - clearly crossed seed, so I am growing a hybrid, perhaps a cross with Polish or Ferris Wheel. I got to taste and save seeds from Dwarf Irma’s Highland Cherry (excellent), and Suzy’s Wild Red (excellent). The cross between Cherokee Chocolate and Orange Coastal Pride seems to have worked. Some of the variegated microdwarfs are throwing sprays of blossoms. There are volunteer tomato seedlings (likely Mexico Midget) all over my gravel driveway.

As far as general garden maintenance, I am sticking to daily watering and weekly feeding, though the day has slipped to Saturday. This is the time to keep the plants healthy, then stand back and see what the results are as varieties ripen. The past three days saw heavy late afternoon or evening thunderstorms, which is leading to more foliage diseases (septoria and/or early blight) at this point in the season than I experienced last year.

With Cherokee Green clearly crossed, I have but a few varieties that I am familiar with - Cherokee Purple, Cherokee Chocolate, Polish, Dwarf Liz’s Teardrop, and Lucky Cross. Pretty much everything else will be a surprise - either family heirlooms new to me this year, or F2 selections from my recent hybrids. What fun!

Gorgeous tomatoes to come on an F2 variegated regular leaf plant from my cross of Blues Bling with Little Lucky.

Off The Vine Volume 2, Number 2. "For Sale - Heirloom Tomato Plants" by Darrell Merrell

Cluster of Cherokee Purple in late June

For Sale: Heirloom Tomato Plants

by Darrell Merrell

Here’s a charming guest article for our newsletter by Oklahoma’s own “Tomato Man”, Darrell Merrell. Darrell departed this earth on April 24, 2008, at the age of 69. His obituary tells a bit about his wonderful life. Darrell was instrumental in the discovery of Cherokee Green, which emerged from the sample of Cherokee Chocolate sent to me in 1997. Enjoy this peek into his entry into selling tomato plants in his area.

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On a cold winter’s night of February 1993 I was thumbing through my treasure of new seed catalogs when an idea suddenly popped into my head. It came while studying the heirloom tomato seed section when I though, “You know, nurseries no longer sell these plants. I bet if people could get them they would love them as much as I do. Maybe I ought to grow a few and see if they will sell!”

Not having a greenhouse, I started by planting several flats in my kitchen. Soon I had flats of seedlings and transplants scattered throughout the house. On warm days I would carry them outside to bathe in the bright sunshine and then tote them back in at night. Until mid-April, when it was warm enough to leave them outside at night, I was spending an hour each morning and each evening moving them out and carrying them in. since I live alone, having tomato plants scattered all around the house was no problem. I reveled in it.

Late on a March afternoon while transplanting at my kitchen work table I received a call from Aunt Vera. Vera is a feisty, independent little lady in her 80’s. “What are you doing?” “Transplanting tomato plants, I replied.” “Getting them ready for your garden, huh?” “Yes,” said I. “How many do you have?” “Oh, about 1500.” “What,” she exclaimed, “what in the world are you going to do with 1,500 tomato plants?” “Well, I’m going to plant some and try to sell the rest.” Then she asked, “Where are you putting them?” “All over the house; on the kitchen table, in the bedroom, in the living room…anywhere I can find a place to set a flat.” She began to laugh and giggle…and laugh. She really got a big kick out of the picture in her mind’s eye. “I’ll guess we’ll have to start calling you ‘The Tomato Man’. And that came to be the name I eventually adopted for my business.

It was a natural progression from other business names I have used. While raising a family of three children I have been a stockbroker, a bank trust officer and then for ten years the owner of doughnut shops where I became known as ‘The Doughnut Man’. In January of 1990 I sold (gave away) my doughnut business and moved back to the old homestead in Tulsa. My father had passed away the previous year; my mother was 80 years old and in seriously bad health and my sister, five years older than I, had just been diagnosed with terminal cancer. Mom and Sis were living together but unable to take care of themselves, let alone each other. I became their caretaker, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, for a period of 4 years and 9 months. They are now both deceased.

The best emotional, spiritual and physical outlets for me were reading and gardening. The first year I grew the standard varieties of hybrid tomatoes, but I got to thinking of the open-pollinated varieties we grew when I was a kid. The only names I could recall were Sioux, Rutgers and Homestead, but I sure remembered them tasting better than hybrids.

Through Organic Gardening magazine I found a few seed companies that were selling heirloom tomato seeds. I was hooked. I began to become more concerned with genetic diversity and the environment and began switching, more and more, to organic gardening practices. I soon concluded that we as gardeners had been and are being “sold down the river” by the industrial complex of chemical fertilizer and hybrid seed companies. So, I switched entirely to open-pollinated and heirloom vegetable plants.

The question of how I could make a contribution to the furtherment of a safer environment and the preservation of genetic diversity often occurred to me. When the idea of selling heirloom tomato plants dawned on me. I had my answer. We, as avid gardeners, generally prefer to start our own plants from seed but most gardeners do not. They buy transplants!

I already had in mind a market outlet. Since my sister’s death in October, 1993, I had sold books on Saturdays at the Tulsa Flea Market, reputedly one of the top ten flea markets in the United States. From ‘The Doughnut Man’ I had become ‘The Book Man’. It was natural for Aunt Vera and others to begin calling me ‘The Tomato Man’. My plan was to begin selling plants in mid-April, the prime time to plants in our area. But my plans changed.

A local nurseryman asked me to operate a Fruit and Vegetable Stand. It was guaranteed income so I accepted with the proviso that I could sell my heirloom tomato plants at the stand. I explained to him what heirlooms were and he looked at me in disbelief when I told him I expected to charge one dollar per plant; he was getting 89 cents for four hybrid plants!  I didn’t know whether they would sell or not but I was willing to give it a try. Each day I sold a few, and I mean sold! I had to explain to each potential customer what an heirloom tomato was and what their virtues were compared to hybrids.

Then the best kind of advertising came my way…free advertising in the form of a newspaper article. A feature writer for the local newspaper, the Tulsa World, was referred to me when she asked the nurseryman about heirlooms. While her article primarily featured hybrids, there was a small column on heirlooms and ‘The Tomato Man’. I was swamped. Gardeners drove from a distance of over 100 miles to buy my plants. I wa sin a state of euphoria and the nurseryman was aghast with amazement. Shortly thereafter I left the “stand” and placed a sign by my front gate that said “Heirloom Tomato Plants.”

Previously I had transplanted into small one-inch square cups and sold the plants for one dollar. I learned that the small cups were too small for proper root growth so I switched to 4” pots and upped the price to $2 each. Sound greedy? I think not. Demand was exceeding supply, it cost much more for a 4” pot and I was selling a larger and healthier plant. Even a “hermit” has to pay his bills and this was my only source of income.

The most popular sellers were of course the ones I liked and had experience growing; Pink Brandywine, Yellow Brandyiwne, Pruden’s Purple, Cherokee Purple, Burbank, Abraham Lincoln, German Johnson, Riesentraube and Radiator Charie’s Mortgage Lifter, along with others for a total of 20 varieites. They were good tomatoes all and some had colorful histories; they were fun to sell.

For the remainder of the year and through March of 1995 I reverted back to being ‘The Book Man’ on Saturdays at the Tulsa Flea Market. But most of the time was devoted to the 39 varieties of heirloom tomatoes in my garden. Through Seed Savers Exchange I purchased Suzanne Ashworth’s book Seed to Seed and using the fermentation method she described I saved thousands of tomato seeds.      

Seed saving is very important to me. It is one method I use to ensure that I offer the best plants possible for the climate in this area. Most of the plants that I grow are grown from my own saved seed. After a few seasons, it generally takes three, by saving seed from the best fruit from the best vines I have noticed a marked improvement in production and quality in several varieties, especially my favorite…Pink Brandywine. I am a believer in acclimatization.

Though this is not an article concerning the technical aspects of tomato culture, I do want to encourage new subscribers to Off the Vine to read three articles in two back issues that have been helpful to me. In Volume I, #3, Isolation Distances for Tomatoes, by Jeff McCormack, and Saving Seeds, by Carolyn Male; also in Volume I, #3, Adaptation of Tomatoes by John P. Rahart.

Since the groundwork had been laid for a greater sales year in 1995 I needed to move my operations out of the kitchen. A friend who had experience in building greenhouses helped me build a 13’X40’X8’ hoop greenhouse in return for my helping him with a greenhouse he was building. We finished my greenhouse in mid-March, 1995. I had already begun planting in the kitchen and had several flats to move into their new home. With some volunteer help I continued to plant until I had some 30 varieties to sell. To the varieties already named from last year I added Red Brandywine, Eva Purple Ball, 1984, Red Rose, Arkansas Traveler, Wins All, Hughs, Persimmon and several others. The second Saturday in April I took plants to the Flea Market and was greeted by a repeat customer from last year who told me that the plants he got from me the previous year grew the best tomatoes he’d ever tasted. What a great way to start the year.

 Fortune continued to shine. The Tulsa World published a second article about my tomatoes entitled “South Tulsan Grows Tomatoes of Yore”, and it even had a color photo of me inside the greenhouse holding a flat of plants. The next Saturday at the Brookside Herb Day in Tulsa I sold 1,200 tomato plants!

The demand was so great that I could not possibly transplant enough seedlings so my next-door neighbors, the Coheas, and I organized a transplant party for a Sunday afternoon. About 15 of our friends gathered and transplanted some 2,000 seedlings and we capped off the day with a BBQ and fried chicken dinner. My brother Kenneth, from Mobile, Alabama, drove up to help. He became so enamored that he stayed for three weeks. My daughter Lisa came up from Dallas and spent 10 days helping me through the Sand Springs Herbal Affair, the largest one day plant sale in the Southwest.

I rented a large U-haul moving van, loaded it with 6,000 plants and headed for Sand Springs, a suburb of Tulsa. The previous year the fair had drawn 25,000 gardeners to purchase from 40 or so vendors. But neither lady luck nor the Sun shone that day it rained all day, with a cold wind gusting to 30 mpg, and the temperature struggled to a high of only 59. I brought home 5,500 plants! If that was not bad enough, the same thing happened two weeks later at the First Annual Oklahoma City Herb Festival.

Nevertheless, through the Flea Market and sales from home I had a fine year. I also had added other heirloom vegetables to sell; basil, peppers, eggplants, watermelon, cucumbers, and two vining flowers. I had a lot of happy repeat customers who referred new customers. In addition to publicity from the newspaper article my heirloom tomatoes were mentioned on two radio programs and a local TV station did a 3 minute feature story in early July.

Best of all was the pleasure given to me by happy customers such as the young man who showed me two tomatoes and said they were the best he had ever tasted but that he had lost the markers and didn’t know the names. Fortunately they were easy to identify…Cherokee Purple and Red Brandywine.

Perhaps my favorite incident was one in which I did not directly participate. On Memorial Day weekend my friend Charlie was minding store at home while I was at the Flea Market. About mid-day an elderly lady pulled into the driveway in a late model luxury car. It seems that her husband had recently died and she wanted to do something special in his memory. He just loved tomatoes, both in the growing and the eating. Did we have anything suitable to decorate his grave? When she spotted a gallon pot containing a large Cherokee Purple she knew that was just the thing. She said she was going to wrap it in foil and ripen and place it on his grave. It’s a story that tugs at the heartstrings but I like to let my mischievous imagination play with this one. Imagine that she left the potted Cherokee Purple until it was cleanup time at the cemetery and the attendant spirited it home to his garden. When the fruit ripened to a reddish-brown purple he must have though that his graveyard tomato surely had crossed from the Great Beyond.

In truth, what heavenly plants are these old time tomatoes. To me they aureate with mysticism and spirituality. This reverence keeps me mindful of Henry David Thoreau’s admonition in his marvelous Walden: “trade curses everything it handles; and though you trade in messages from heaven, the whole curse of trade attaches to the business.” My efforts then must not be for notoriety, or fame, or even money; though in and of themselves not bad things, but each good things to have. The Seed Savers Exchange motto says it best, “Passing on our vegetable heritage.” I am mindful of this when I give away at least one plant to most customers and with large orders I give away several plants of different varieties.

We as gardeners and I, in particular, owe a debt of heart-felt gratitude to past gardeners and countless others for their preservation and perpetuation efforts, the gardening magazines that continue to spread the word about heirlooms, the seed saving organizations, the small companies now specializing in heirloom seeds, and last but not least Carolyn and Craig for this publication Off The Vine. In my own small way I have carried the cause just one step further by providing the live plant to the backyard gardener. Surely some will catch the fever and pass it on.

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This is truly a wonderful article. For those of us who, through the years, found ourselves peddling our over-planted seedlings from our yard, or from flea or farmers markets, there is a lot here that will seem very familiar. It also reminds me of how our little Off The Vine work allowed us to cross paths with many like minded, wonderful souls.

One of my favorites, Polish, growing in a cage on June 23

Status of Peppers and Eggplants in the 2022 garden - July 5 update

Column of eggplants and peppers in straw bales and grow bags, as of July 5

Things are growing very well in the pepper and eggplant department. I am very pleased that I decided to dedicate strawbales to the cause this season, in reaction to the last two years’ disappointing results. I do have a few in grow bags, but they are in a far better location this year and they are doing very well also. My overall goal for both crops/all plants listed below are great health, heavy yields, and good quality fully ripe fruit for plenty of saved seeds.

Let’s start with eggplants:

Midnight Lightning, straw bale, from seed E20-6 - Tall growing, foliage with the desired (and characteristic) dark purple shading on the upper growth. Medium dark purple flowers with a dark purple calyx. Slender fruit are forming, glossy dark purple. Looks true to type, and probably a week from harvesting the first fruit.

Midnight Lightning July 5

Midnight Lightning, 5 gallon grow bag, from seed E21-4 - looks exactly like the plant in the straw bale from E20-6, above, which is great news. First harvest is probably a week away for this one as well. I hope to get some good seed saved this year; the poor growing locations of the last two years meant poor fruit ripening for saving seeds.

Twilight Lightning July 5

Twilight Lightning, straw bale - stocky, spreading plant, as hoped (it is the most compact/shortest of the Orient Express selections). Medium violet flowers, fruit are white with a prominent medium lavender streak, and look to be very slender and long. This looks exactly as it should, and first harvest should be in a week or so.

Skinny Twilight, ready for picking, July 5

Skinny Twilight, straw bale - the plant habit is very much like Midnight Lightning, but the foliage does not have the purplish cast. The medium purple flowers give way to medium purple, slender fruit, not a dark as Midnight Lightning - just as I expected. First harvest will be in a few days.

Mardi Gras July 5

Mardi Gras, straw bale, from seed E21-1 - the medium height, large foliaged plant has little purple in even the veins in the leaves, and the stems. The flowers are a relatively light purple, and the developing tear drop shaped eggplants are light green with a prominent lavender shading - exactly as hoped. First harvest is about a week away.

Mardi Gras, 5 gallon grow bag, from seed E20-5 - This should grow just like the one described above. It is not quite as advanced as the plant in the straw bale, and buds are just starting to form. The plant is growing splendidly in the grow bag.

Green Ghost, 5 gallon grow bag - The medium green leaves are very large; this was the smallest seedling when it went into the grow bag, so is a bit behind all of the other eggplant, with small buds just forming. The plant is looking great. This is related to Mardi Gras (out of the same unexpected cross).

Now, on to the peppers.

Fire Opal July 5

Fire Opal, straw bale - Nice stocky, healthy plant, blossoming well, initial peppers set - bell shaped, start cream yellow, then develop the lavender coloring. Goal for this one is to then go to a golden yellow color when ripe, sweet and ready for seed saving.

White Gold July 5

White Gold, straw bale - Similar growth to its relative above; flowering well, initial blocky bell peppers are cream yellow. Expectation is that this one will ripen medium yellow.

Royal Purple, straw bale - This is a taller pepper than the two above (or one below), and the stems are a more medium green color. Plant is just flowering.

Carolina Amethyst July 5

Carolina Amethyst, straw bale - This is growing just like Fire Opal and White Gold. The initial blocky bell pepper went from cream yellow to clear deep lavender. If all goes well, it will end up red.

Chocolate Blocky Bell, straw bale - The plant is very leafy and dense. It is healthy and happy and just flowering.

Orange Bell Improved - straw bale - This is even more compact than the one above. Flowers are just opening.

Pinata, 5 gallon grow bag - This is quite an open plant, with relatively small foliage. It is already setting small Jalapeno shaped very pale green peppers.

Padron, straw bale - Perhaps the tallest of the peppers thus far, this is flowering freely and the first few dark green characteristically shaped peppers formed. I expect a huge yield from this.

Shishito, straw bale - This is a shorter, more delicate plant than Padron, but is flowering well and fruit set should occur very soon. I expect a heavy yield.

Shishito, 5 gallon grow bag - This is growing very much like the one in a straw bale. Perhaps the plant is just a tad smaller, but it is flowering and getting ready to set fruit.

Eggplant in a straw bale









Off The Vine Volume 2, Number 2 "The Mixed Bag of 1995" by Craig

June 22 view up a double column of tomato plants

It is hard to believe that this big report was only the 9th garden since my jump into focusing on heirlooms. Reading through it is very nostalgic - and clearly some tomatoes I loved need to be grown again soon!

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The Mixed Bag of 1995

by Craig

It is hard to believe that it is already the first week of November. The summer went by like a blur, mostly due to the workplace challenge of surviving a merger. The garden was even more therapeutic than normal, and I was once again reminded of what a wonderful hobby it is. It was not the easiest growing season this year, due to a long dry start, followed by a solid month of rain just when foliage diseases get going. The second long dry spell that followed was a blessing, allowing me to salvage something out of what could have been a near total disaster! This article will summarize and describe the high- and low-lights of my 1995 garden. It was my most ambitious year with respect of number of tomato plants (120), and the high ratio of varieties that were obtained from the USDA collection. This garden gave me a few pleasant surprises, a good number of old favorites, yet a large number of failures as well; either plants that went down prematurely from disease, or quite a few varieties from which I harvested nothing at all! Ah, yes, the element of regional adaptation may have shown its face this year. Oh, well...enough chatter.  On with the tour of the garden.

Among the USDA varieties, I was most impressed with Buckbee’s New Fifty Day, Golden Monarch, Cream City, New Big Dwarf, Yellow Ponderosa, Success, and The Orange. Buckbee’s New Fifty Day took a bit longer to mature than the name indicates, but gave me nice, smooth medium sized red fruit of delicious “old fashioned” flavor, which I suppose means it has a nice acid bite to balance its sweetness. It was released in the early 1900’s by Buckbee, which has now become Shumway. Another fine red tomato is Success, which was developed and released by the Maule Seed Company in 1900.  Productivity and flavor are among its attributes. Two bright yellow tomatoes, Golden Monarch (from the 1930’s, as far as I can trace) and Yellow Ponderosa (possibly a Henderson variety from the turn of the century) are very similar, medium to nearly large, slightly oblate, but with a snappy, rich taste not frequently found in yellow tomatoes. Cream City, seemingly from Currie’s Seed Company in the 1930’s, and New Big Dwarf, from Isbell in 1915, are each sweet, delicious pink tomatoes.  The notable thing about the latter is that it gives large fruit, nearly a pound, on a true dwarf plant that grows only about 2 feet tall. Supposedly, it originated from a cross between Ponderosa, a large pink indeterminate, with Dwarf Champion, a dwarf small fruited pink. Finally, The Orange, listed from Henderson in the 1930’s, is a large to huge, delicious, pale orange tomato that is remarkably similar to a more widely grown heirloom called Persimmon, whose background is unknown (perhaps they are one in the same).

Of the USDA obtained varieties that were not success stories were Albino (an ordinary red, of all things), Golden Glory (small bright yellow, kind of hollow inside, and bland), Abel, Earliest of All, Tops All, Trimson, Stick, High Crimson, Early Giant, Imperial, Victorian Dwarf #1, Ham Green Favorite, Mikado Ecarlate, Royal Wonder, Jagged Leaf, Dwarf Stone, Enormous, Giant Beauty, Heterosis, Bountiful (all varying sizes of red, some slightly better than others, but none standing above the rest), Nectarine, Peak of Perfection, Vivid, Potato Leaf Type, Dwarf Recessive, Mikado regular leaf, Giant Tree (all pinks of varying attributes), Orange King, Orange Chatham, Yellow, Gold Ball, Orange Tree, Golden Beauty (in the yellow to orange category, none outstanding), and, finally, those which met their demise from disease or no yield, including Matchless, Giant Italian Potato Leaf, Mikado potato leaf, Diener, and Santa Clara Canner. Despite my lack of enthusiasm for many of the above, most are significant commercial introductions of the early 1900’s, and should be maintained for historical and preservation reasons.

Finally, the true heirlooms remain to be discussed. Of the ones that were new to me this year, I was quite impressed with the following: Orange (orange, from Russia), Indische Fleische (dusky rose to purplish, large, delicious, from a SSE member), Azoychka (yellow, from Russia, wonderful), Big Yellow (huge deep yellow, from Dotty Noble, PA), Russian Persimmon (yellow, from Russia, superb), Orange Strawberry (from Carolyn, large orange heart, not a great yielder, though), A. C. Red (large potato leaf pink, also from Dotty), and Mennonite (large, oblate bicolor, sweet, from SSE member). Some did not impress me very much, including Lovelace Red (from a friend), Potato Leaf Hillbilly (from Carolyn), Bull Heart (pink, from Russia), Cosmonaut Volkov Red (large red, from Russia), and Southern Night (unusual determinate potato leaf dusky rose, from Russia, odd texture and flavor). I managed no fruit at all from the Russian variety Snowball.

Then there are the old favorites. Once again, I was delighted with the performance and flavor of Madara (yellow cherry tomato), Anna Russian (in my hall of fame!), Cherokee Purple (ditto), Eva Purple Ball, Livingston’s Favorite, Wins All, Livingston’s Beauty, Dorothy’s Green, Polish, Halladay’s Mortgage Lifter, Brandywine, Yellow Brandywine, Aunt Ruby’s German Green, Reif’s Red Heart, Nicky Crain, Livingston’s Magnus, Lillian’s Yellow Heirloom, and Stump of the World. It was, strangely, not a very good year for some other favorites, including Yellow White, Robinson’s German Bicolor, Big Sandy, Nina’s Heirloom, Hugh’s, Ukrainian Heart, Mullens’ Mortgage Lifter, Abraham Lincoln, Bisignano #2, Opalka, Potato Leaf Yellow, and Alpha Pink.

Last are the surprises that seem to occur each growing season. My Sun Gold cherry tomato hybrid growouts continued, resulting in a number of nice flavored, orange open pollinated cherry tomatoes. I also have a potato leaf red cherry tomato from this experiment. Then there are the potato leaf versions of Bisignano #2 and Madara, both resembling their parents. Finally, I had an interesting cross from Cherokee Purple seed. One of my plants gave me a dark brown, instead of pink, tomato. In other words, instead of green over red with a clear skin, it was green over red with yellow skin. The tomato was wonderful, and I will be growing out saved seed in hopes of stabilizing this unusual, unique tomato. If anyone wants to try out seeds from the above Sun Gold growouts, unexpected potato leaf varieties, or this Cherokee Purple cross, just let me know and I will send some seed.

That is all for now. It is time for me to get ready to send the seed descriptions that I will be offering in the 1996 yearbook to the SSE, then to prepare for the onslaught of seed requests. Until next newsletter, good-bye, and have a great winter holiday!

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This is a really interesting read for several reasons. The dark brown tomato from Cherokee Purple, which I assumed was a cross, ended up being a skin color mutation - Cherokee Chocolate was born! Azoychka finally emerged, a tomato I grew a few years ago in Raleigh and loved it. I also am reminded of how much I enjoyed Golden Monarch - it is definitely time to grow it again. A few other varieties that made a nice impression but somehow have become misplaced in my recent gardens are Buckbee’s New Fifty Day, The Orange, Success, Indische Fleisch, and Madara, just to name a few. Sadly, I will have to re-obtain seeds from SSE members, since my saved seeds are likely too old to germinate.

View of the 2022 garden on June 22 from the rear corner of the yard.

Late June garden update - there is joy in the Hendersonville garden...and the best lies ahead!

Bell Pepper Royal Purple thrilled growing in a straw bale

If I was to have planned perfect weather for gardening, it would be the 2022 growing season to date. There is just enough rain, just enough heat, plenty of sun, and reasonable humidity. The proof is in the condition of the garden at this particular moment. Of course, things can change, but so far, so good.

The garlic was harvested and is in two big bunches, curing the garage hanging on hooks. We are enjoying lettuce (which will be gone in a few weeks), rhubarb (combining with strawberries, blueberries or blackberries for crisps), cucumbers, summer squash and snap beans. The sugar snap peas were fine, but they are always gone well before the appetite for them is satisfied.

Cherokee Purple - future delicious tomatoes here!

The focus now turns to the mid summer stars of the annual show - peppers, eggplants, and, especially, tomatoes. Most of the pepper plants have tiny peppers, and the eggplants are following suit. ALL of the tomatoes are setting fruit very well. Pests have been few, and disease at a reasonable level. I have one sick plant - an F2 dwarf selection from Cancelmo Family Heirloom X Dwarf Moby’s Cherry. It suddenly developed Fusarium wilt. Once the nice looking, medium sized tomatoes ripen, the plant will be gone.

We harvested (and enjoyed) the very first ripe tomato a few days ago - a future Dwarf Tomato Project release called Dwarf Irma’s Highland Cherry. It is a prolific chocolate colored cherry tomato with a full, delicious flavor that is nicely balanced between fruitiness, tartness and sweetness.

We are not far away from the first Mexico Midgets, and Suzy’s Wild Orange, Suzy’s Wild Red, Orange Fruity, Yellow Fruity, Red Egg Yolk and Egg Yolk will start to show color very soon.

Dwarf Irma’s Highland Cherry - this one ripened and was eaten yesterday…yum!

Off The Vine Volume 2, Number 2 - "West Virginia Tomato Growing" by David Cain

Mountain Laurel seen on a June 20 hike on the Flat Laurel Creek trail

Here’s a nice, concise guest article. It is always nice to be reminded how often we had guest contributors to our newsletter!

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West Virginia Tomato Growing

by Dave Cain

Gardening has been my passion since I was a young lad and tomatoes have been the mainstay of my small backyard plots. Expectation, fascination and accomplishment are some of the reasons why I am drawn to cultivate the soil each spring.

Having been born and raised in West Virginia, gardening is part of my Mountaineer heritage. The diverse ethnic backgrounds of our people have made many plant varieties available, especially heirloom tomatoes.

The first plants I raised at the age of twelve were Abe Lincoln’s and a very delicious tomato called Grandma’s Favorite. After weeding, hoeing and handpicking pests from my plants I was rewarded with an excellent crop of large delicious tomatoes. I even won a second place ribbon in the annual 4-H project fair. I was proud of myself and probably needed a larger hat size after all the praise that came my way. Little did I realize that we had an almost perfect growing season that summer. Long gentle rains interrupted the warm beautiful days at just the right interval and pests just seemed to know I was a neophyte. The bugs took their appetites elsewhere.

Nature has a way of humbling us mortals in a most abrupt manner. My tomato crop the next season was a near disaster due to heat, drought and the fact that it was a peak year for Colorado Potato Beetles, which sprang from the ground in multitudes. They had voracious appetites and my tomatoes were high on their menu.

I am now forty-six and look back with much pleasure on my years of tomato growing experiences. I have tried many varieties and many techniques. These years of experience have proven to me that common sense and basics are the key ingredients for successful tomato cultivation, but never forgetting Mother Nature’s tremendous influence.

This year I am growing Charlie’s Mortgage Lifter, German Red Strawberry and Dad’s Sunset from seeds I obtained from the great people at Southern Exposure Seed Exchange. I’m also raising an heirloom Australian tomato which resembles a red pepper when mature. They make delicious pasta sauce and are great stuffed and baked. I’ve been growing them annually for four years, saving the seeds, and having great success.

A gallon of manure tea mixed with a tablespoon of Epsom salts, given once a week, has my plants glowing with health and vigor. And my feelings of expectation, fascination, and accomplishment are also in full bloom once again.

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Thinking back on our guest authors, some I’ve kept in touch with, some not, some have passed on - and some, like David Cain, were never familiar to me - it was often Carolyn who expanded our writers with some of her tomato growing friends.

Waterfall on Flat Laurel Creek trail

A few news items - June 21, 7 PM Garden History Zoom, and a new Joe Lamp'l course - time to preregister!

View of the cucumber and bean bales June 20

This is going to be a very brief blog - but there are two big news items!

First - I will be giving a Zoom on behalf of the Darien Library, Darien CT - it is free for all to join - the Zoom link is here. The title of the talk is “"What We Grew Then, and What We Grow Now: A Look at the History of Gardening" - I will be taking a look at gardening in the US in the mid 1800s, early 1900s, mid 1900s and today, looking at the most popular crops and varieties and trends. The talk is loaded with images from old seed catalogs. I am so pleased that I was asked to do this workshop - it is one of my favorites!

Next - my friend and colleague Joe Lamp’l (of Growing a Greener World fame) will be launching his next gardening course, part of his online Organic Garden Academy. The course title is Organic Vegetable Gardening and will launch in spring 2023. You can preregister for the course here . Joe and I co-instruct the course Growing Epic Tomatoes, which has proven to be very highly regarded (as with all of Joe’s courses). This newest one promises to be of equal excellence and value.

Two Cherokee Chocolate in a straw bale, June 20 2022

Off The Vine, Volume 2, Number 2. "C and C's Column", by Carolyn

Scarlet Bee Balm just starting to bloom June 9

We are approaching the half way mark with the Off The Vine republishings…wow. I hope that you are finding them of value - and having fun reading them! Here is the typical opening column by Carolyn.

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C and C’s Column

by Carolyn

We knew there might be times when publishing Off the vine might be delayed , and this is one of them. A series of events in both Craig’s and my lives made it impossible to get this issue to you earlier. I would suspect, as we have pointed out before, that this might happen again in the future but while an issue might be delayed you will always receive the number of issues that you paid for. As most of you know, we both have demanding full-time jobs and other responsibilities which we must attend to.

It’s time to renew your subscription if your mailing label has 22 next to your name (22 means Volume 2, #2). Separate renewal notices will not be sent out so if you’ve decided to stay with us, please send your renewal, clearly marking it as a renewal., after you’ve read this issue. Subscription renewal prices for current subscribers are $5 for one year (3 issues) and $2 for two years (6 issues) for US residents; $6 (US) for one year and $14 (US) for two years for Canadian and Mexican subscribers and $7 (US) for one year and $16 (US) for two years for all other foreign addresses. These rates reflect the increase we announced last February which commences with Volume 3, which will probably be published in May, 1996. We have started stating the new prices in any notices published such as the summer SSE edition and others. Any New US subscribers (not renewals) are expected to pay $7 for three issues and $14 for six issues.

We have two guest authors in this issue. Dave Cain lives in Fairmont, WV and has grown heirloom tomatoes in his garden for many years. He writes from the heart and I thought you’d enjoy his musings on gardening in the hills of West Virginia. Darrell Merrell has told you quite a bit about himself in his article and I can only add that he, like Dave Cain, is a warm, generous, caring person. Are all tomato people so nice? I’m beginning to think so. Darrell is willing to share information with anyone who asks. His address is 2208 West 81st Street, South, Tulsa, OK 74132-2623 and his phone number is (918) 446-7522. Craig and I have each written articles about our summer, 1995 tomato grow-outs, and our methods of germinating tomato seeds. And I interviewed Jeff McCormack of Southern Exposure Seed Exchange for our featured “tomato” person. Most of you are probably aware of his excellent catalog of heirlooms (will list address is next issue) and we thought it would be interesting for you to know him on a more personal level. Craig and I have known Jeff for several years and consider ourselves fortunate to be able to call him a friend!

Amy Goldman wrote an article on Desert Sweet tomatoes for our last issue and I mentioned that she was intent on winning the top prize at the Dutchess County Fair. Well, she did it, with 38 blue ribbons. However, she’s decided to retire from “active competition” while on top and is going to find new challenges, such as beating the world record for pumpkins and such. Go for it Amy, whatever it is you decide to conquer!

Our regular subscribers know that last February we made available to Off the Vine readers F2 seeds from some interesting crosses done by Stanley Zubrowski and Tad Smith. We plan to do the same thing again, with some new crosses available, but I can’t distribute the F2 seeds and meet my seed obligations to Seed Savers Exchange at the same time. So, we’re asking for someone to volunteer to distribute the F2 seeds to our readers. Please give me a call at (518) 783-5565 evenings before 9pm and let me know if you’d be interested in helping us. We would deeply appreciate it. I would imagine that a few hours per week for two to three months would be the time requirement.

I spent three days at the Rodale Institute for Research in late August where I presented a workshop on heirloom tomatoes. I had sent seed and their staff did a beautiful job of growing them out for demonstration purposes. I was pleased and surprised to find many other heirloom tomatoes also being grown because Rob Cardillo, the photographer for Organic Gardening, was using them as subjects for file photos. The workshop went well and I met some very nice folks. Chuck Wyatt and Howard Essl drove up from the Washington, DC/Baltimore area (a long drive), and I was delighted to meet them since I had only corresponded with them via phone, e-mail and letters in the past. The most animated member of the group was Jim Weaver, a Mennonite farmer and Off the Vine subscriber. He’d ridden his bicycle many miles to attend and certainly enlivened the day. I still can’t believe he really doesn’t like to eat tomatoes, especially after seeing some of the varieties he grew and donated to Organic Gardening for their taste testing session which was held the last day I was there (article by Rob Cardillo in the latest Organic Gardening). Unfortunately I had a plane to catch and couldn’t attend. Jim’s heirloom tomatoes were the most beautiful ones I’ve ever seen! I had a chance to visit his farm, unannounced, and while he was out in the fields

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Yet another classic from Carolyn. There are some names she referenced I’d not thought of in many years - Chuck Wyatt, and, especially, Howard Essl. Pretty nostalgic stuff to read.

Mountain laurel blooming in our early June hike in Pink Beds trail in the Pisgah Forest

The 2022 garden is now well underway - mid-June update

Garlic removed Jan 9, variegated microdwarfs now in place

There are certain points in the year of a gardener that are simply the best. Each gardener of course will have their own particular favorite parts. For me, seed starting, transplanting, and checking out progress as the plants mature reign supreme. Sure, harvesting and tasting are great - but that part comes and goes like lightning. My least favorite part is hammering the stakes into the ground to support the indeterminate tomatoes.

As we race through June, it’s a good time to take stock. On June 5, I harvested the garlic from the elevated raised bed and used the space for variegated microdwarf tomatoes. The rest of the garlic (in the other raised bed) came out on June 9 - I think I have about 30 big bulbs curing on trays in my garage. Additional variegated microdwarfs, as well as one sent to me by my garden pal Justin, are now where the garlic used to be. Some lettuce and strawberries share the bed with the tomato plants. In the elevated raised bed, some chard is keeping the microdwarf tomatoes company.

We’ve been enjoying rhubarb, using it in combination with strawberries or blueberries for delicious crisps. We have a few containers of basil growing here and there. It feels odd to have the garden largely planted. The weeks are settling into the weekly feedings, daily waterings, and regular passes through the plants to note where suckering or tying or blemished foliage removal is needed.

The eggplants and peppers in strawbales or growbags are looking great. Most of the peppers have tiny buds, and a few of the eggplants do as well. I am so pleased that I decided to move both crops to a more favorable position, and put many in strawbales. The scant crop of each were really disappointing the last two years. Though many are unconvinced about eating eggplant, it is a star in some of our favorite summery things to eat. And who can ever get enough sweet peppers! Having Shishito and Padron as options will be really fun, and delicious.

As for the tomatoes - WOW. I still am amazed at how quickly the plants take to the strawbales and containers. It has been a month and a week, and the plants are pretty monstrous, with ample fruit set on most varieties. There are so many varieties to look forward to that I will start to feature some on my next update blog. With only a few familiar varieties - Egg Yolk, Mexico Midget, Mortgage Lifter (both Halladay and Mullens), Cherokee Purple, Cherokee Green and Cherokee Chocolate (two plants), everything else is going to be a mystery - either family heirlooms recently sent to me, or F2s of my recent crosses. What fun!

Be sure to catch my weekly Instagram Live - Thursdays at 3 PM eastern. My handle is @nctomatoman . Weekly tours of the garden demonstrate how quickly things grow!

A whole lotta garlic curing in the garage