Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Blight again. Can I save the fruit?
Collapse
X
-
Almost certainly not, no.
In future, I would recommend growing only blight resistant varieties outdoors. This has been a bad year for blight, and even my resistant varieties are relatively badly affected (compared to most years), but the infection is mostly limited to the leaves, and only around 10-15% of the fruit are becoming infected.
I recommend varieties in the Crimson Crush series. Crimson Crush itself is a large tomato. There is also Cocktail Crush (also know as Crimson Cocktail), which is small to medium, and Rose Crush, which is a pink-hued beefsteak. All taste pretty good. I think there is a plum variety in the series, too.
- 2 likes
-
Ok, thanks. It's just so depressing after getting such promising fruits yet again. Even blight resistant potatoes have had it. I'm going to cut all the leaves off my greenhouse Tom's to get the fruits to ripen quicker before anything gets them. A grower once swore by it for getting better fruit.Last edited by Marb67; 20-09-2024, 06:45 AM.
Comment
-
Personally I’d remove all the healthy looking tomatoes, even if they are green, and either freeze them or chutney them.
I’ve never managed to rescue any by leaving them to turn red. Once they show brown blotches they taste dreadful"Nicos, Queen of Gooooogle" and... GYO's own Miss Marple
Location....Normandy France
Comment
-
I would pick them all too. Sometimes you can get a few to turn red without going brown, but it depends how far the disease has spread inside the plant. It is going to turn cold anyway after the weekend. Tomatoes will ripen off the plant as long as they have begun to turn a yellowish green rather than the blue-green of very young fruit. If you are worried about blight it may be best to pick anything that looks even vaguely ripe and ripen them indoors.A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAP. - Leonard Nimoy
- 1 like
Comment
Latest Topics
Collapse
Recent Blog Posts
Collapse
Comment