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Don't be. It took me all day to pot them all on, take out the armpits, pot up the armpits (I don't feel able to compost them now I know they make viable plants), feed them, tie them in, and tell them all a bedtime story
All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
My Sungold, sown 3/2, has 3 trusses now, with 6 tiny toms on the 1st truss.
I'm sure the PWFB and the Gardener's Delight would have been as advanced if they hadn't snapped, poor things.
The 2 Moneymakers, sown at the end of Jan, have 3 trusses each, but no baby toms yet.
The problem with rounded personalities is they don't tesselate.
Please tell me more, I haven't heard of this method of growing tomatoes.
It's an armpit thing. You remove a side shoot (the shoot between the main stem and a branch) also known as an armpit, when it's a decent size and pop in some water until it roots. Keep it in the shade and not too hot. When it's rooted pot it up and keep inside on a windowsill over winter(remove from windowsill on cold nights). I've not done this yet but I might this autumn
It's an armpit thing. You remove a side shoot (the shoot between the main stem and a branch) also known as an armpit, when it's a decent size and pop in some water until it roots. Keep it in the shade and not too hot. When it's rooted pot it up and keep inside on a windowsill over winter(remove from windowsill on cold nights). I've not done this yet but I might this autumn
Thanks for the reply Shadylane. Like others on this thread, every year I can't stop myself continuously potting side shoots, but I'd never heard of anyone potting them with the view to overwintering them. I'd imagine they'd have to be cut from the parent plant late in the season.
I have toms set on all of my early toms now. However, the ones that are starting to change colour are those from cuttings of last year's. It's the way to go for extra early tomatoes I think.
Do you let these plants grow to full size? Or do you stop them at a truss or two?
I have 3 varieties changing colour now, I have had toms off my Latah, Shirley, and just noticed my sweet millions have a few pinkish ones on this morning
Please tell me more, I haven't heard of this method of growing tomatoes.
No it's not armpits. At the end of the season I took the top out of a couple of plants and rooted them in water. I grew them on the windowsill over the winter and of course they became leggy and a bit rubbish. I took the top shoot off again and re-rooted and planted. They look about the same size as my seed-grown ones of the same variety but they are much more mature.
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