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Man your right!!! That really does suck!!! Maybe you can do five or six tomatoes in pots next year with clean soil so you don't totally go without. Our soil here this year has not been warm. We did eggplant in black pots this year and had tremendous success. (6000 feet). Been a long time since I've spent a summer in this climate. If we were home we would just be planting tomatoes.
So here's another idea for your green tomatoes..... take all the smaller green tomatoes, half or quarter them and pickle them with dill. (Ayep, like pickles) They're ready by Thanksgiving and people will rave. Put them right on the plate with the olives, pickles and other stuff. Just be sure to put the alum in them so they've got a good crunch!!!
Oh, just so you know, those squash do have perfectly stylish blossoms!!!! LOLOLOLOL
Jon Parr said:
Haha. Hey, as long as they're happy. Maybe your squash can redecorate your greenhouse, give the chives a fabulous haircut, or plan some fish weddings! Ok, I better quit.
Speaking of green 'maters, here in Santa Cruz we got hit with 'late blight' fast and hard in our dirt garden (AP still safe so far). We have never had that before. In two days, our tomato jungle went from luxuriant health to wasteland. My wife harvested six 5 gallon buckets of green tomatoes during the chop, not a single one had time to turn red. Ordinarily we have a big salsa party on labor day and can (or freeze) about 30 gallons of salsa from the garden. Had to change the plans this year. We tried a recipe for green tomato salsa. It's pretty good, I guess, but not as good. Had to add quite a bit of lemon juice get the acidity right. After, chopping the tomatoes, we thought we were in the clear, but then noticed it jumped to a four year old passion vine, and a few others garden plants. So we have decided to slash and burn everything in the dirt garden, and not plant tomatoes or potatoes for two years. Bummer
Well maybe you gotta just start eating the squash and zucchini blossoms.
I wonder if you perhaps got a batch of seed for one of the varieties that is bread particularly for blossoms.
Hi Patrick,
When were they started? Could low autumn light be slowing them down?
I tried hand pollinating Zuccini and Cukes in the green house cuz no bees came in. I clipped a male flower and rubbed it into the female. On the Cukes i used a vibrating toothbrush. All with poor results. We can't compete with the diligence and timelyness of thousands of bees.
Homefire
Hi Patrick,
When were they started? Could low autumn light be slowing them down?
I tried hand pollinating Zuccini and Cukes in the green house cuz no bees came in. I clipped a male flower and rubbed it into the female. On the Cukes i used a vibrating toothbrush. All with poor results.
Homefire
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