You rotter! Now you've got me caught up in this mad idea.
First I have to eat humble pie and admit that tomatoes are SHORT LIVED perennials and not annuals, but the crazy idea of coddling them through winter into the spring months has some kind of bizarre appeal.
I have a variety of large orange cherry tomato called 'Naranjito' that is an F1 and was disgustingly expensive to buy, for eight seeds or so. I am absolutely determined now to keep this going (though I am also doing an experiment with saved seeds to see what the F2 generation will be like and to select from those).
So I have just taken a half dozen of the last side shoots and potted them up in a vermiculite and compost mix, with a little bottom heat in my propagator. I am misting the leaves to give them even more of a chance of rooting at this late stage in the season.
I see someone said that they tend to get very leggy out of season, but I may supplement the lighting and see how they fare. In any case, it will be good to 'cheat' the seed company out of having to buy new expensive seed if they make it through the winter months.
First I have to eat humble pie and admit that tomatoes are SHORT LIVED perennials and not annuals, but the crazy idea of coddling them through winter into the spring months has some kind of bizarre appeal.
I have a variety of large orange cherry tomato called 'Naranjito' that is an F1 and was disgustingly expensive to buy, for eight seeds or so. I am absolutely determined now to keep this going (though I am also doing an experiment with saved seeds to see what the F2 generation will be like and to select from those).
So I have just taken a half dozen of the last side shoots and potted them up in a vermiculite and compost mix, with a little bottom heat in my propagator. I am misting the leaves to give them even more of a chance of rooting at this late stage in the season.
I see someone said that they tend to get very leggy out of season, but I may supplement the lighting and see how they fare. In any case, it will be good to 'cheat' the seed company out of having to buy new expensive seed if they make it through the winter months.
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