By
Norman Winter An
audience gathered at the courthouse in New Jersey to watch
Col. Robert Gibbon Johnson die from eating a basketful of
tomatoes. Colonel Johnson's physician warned he would, "Foam
and froth at the mouth ...double over with appendicitis ...
and expose himself to brain fever." Johnson didn't die that
day in 1820, and a new era for tomatoes slowly
began. Thomas
Jefferson raised them at Monticello as early as 1781 for
ornamental purposes. By 1835, tomatoes were readily
available in North American markets, but were used mostly
for sauces and preserves. Many cookbooks of the era highly
recommended cooking the tomatoes for at least three hours so
the raw taste would be lost. Today,
the tomato is the No. 1 vegetable grown not only Mississippi
gardens but throughout the United States. For this reason,
the National Garden Bureau has designated 1998 as the Year
of the Tomato. 1949 was
a benchmark year for the tomato as W. Atlas Burpee
introduced the first F1 hybrid tomato, Big Boy. It was an
instant success, and since then thousands of new hybrids
have been introduced. Garden centers today offer us every
shape, and colors that range from red, orange and yellow to
even those that look a little like a striped
zebra. When
looking at varieties, Mississippi gardeners may choose how
long before they want their fruit to ripen. Early tomatoes
will ripen in 55 to 60 days from transplanting. Mid-season
is considered from 66 to 80 days for ripe fruit and late
requires more than 80 days. An even
more important decision may be choosing disease-resistant
varieties. When browsing through the tomato selections, you
may notice the letters V, F, N or TMV. These letters mean
the plant is genetically tolerant of verticillium wilt (V),
fusarium wilt (F), nematodes (N) and tobacco mosaic virus
(TMV). The two
types of plant growth for tomatoes are determinate and
indeterminate. Select the growth habit best suited to your
garden use. Indeterminate means varieties grow, blossom and
produce tomatoes throughout the growing season depending on
climatic conditions. The continuous growth produces many
main stems all capable of flowering and producing fruit.
Because of this abundant lush growth, pruning and staking is
recommended. Determinate
tomato plants are relatively compact and produce a full
bushy plant ideally suited to growing in cages. These plants
reach a predetermined height or number of fruit clusters and
do not grow beyond it. The plants flower, set fruit and
ripen in a short period of time so that the main harvest is
concentrated into a few weeks. This may be ideal for those
who want to can or preserve the fresh tomato harvest or for
those like myself who travel a lot during the late
summer. A third
type called semi-determinate is a bushy plant that will set
fruit and ripen over a longer period of time than a normal
determinate. This is one of the reasons Celebrity was
awarded the All-America Selection. Tomatoes
need full sun and a deep, well-drained soil. They require
phosphorous, nitrogen, potash and minor elements, and are
not fond of acidic soil, so you may need to add
lime. Tomatoes
are ideal for growing in containers, so if you have no
garden plot, there is no need to fret. The container needs
to be at least a foot deep with drainage holes at the
bottom. I'll never forget seeing a friend grow cherry
tomatoes in an old bushel basket on the patio table. His
harvest was as great as mine was in the garden. If container
gardening, use a water-soluble fertilizer about every two
weeks, as you will more than likely be watering daily during
the summer. Released:
April 2, 1998 Editor's Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns are within one month of their release. Editors should examine older columns carefully for any information that could be time sensitive.
Southern
Gardening
Tomatoes Rank No.
1 In Mississippi Gardens
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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