Small vegetable garden 69 on the way to laziness

Agriculture and soil. Pollution control, soil remediation, humus and new agricultural techniques.
Biobomb
I posted 500 messages!
I posted 500 messages!
posts: 681
Registration: 02/10/20, 21:13
x 141

Re: Small vegetable patch 69 on the way to laziness




by Biobomb » 25/08/21, 14:21

Alkaline, Father Michel's tomatoes, what did that give?
0 x
User avatar
alkaline
I understand econologic
I understand econologic
posts: 170
Registration: 12/06/19, 18:49
Location: Monts du Lyonnais
x 52

Re: Small vegetable patch 69 on the way to laziness




by alkaline » 30/08/21, 21:11

Biobombe wrote:Alkaline, Father Michel's tomatoes, what did that give?
Ah yes with the holidays I had not yet seen. So this is it
signal-2021-08-30-194048.jpg
Tomatoes from Father Michel
The plans have broken down but there is a lot of fruit.
0 x
it depends
User avatar
Did67
Moderator
Moderator
posts: 20362
Registration: 20/01/08, 16:34
Location: Alsace
x 8685

Re: Small vegetable patch 69 on the way to laziness




by Did67 » 30/08/21, 22:02

What are "Père Michel" tomatoes again ???
0 x
User avatar
Julienmos
Grand Econologue
Grand Econologue
posts: 1265
Registration: 02/07/16, 22:18
Location: Queen water
x 260

Re: Small vegetable patch 69 on the way to laziness




by Julienmos » 30/08/21, 22:18

Did67 wrote:What are "Père Michel" tomatoes again ???


see this post previous page agriculture / small-vegetable-garden-69-on-the-way-to-laziness-t16559-230.html # p450954
0 x
User avatar
Did67
Moderator
Moderator
posts: 20362
Registration: 20/01/08, 16:34
Location: Alsace
x 8685

Re: Small vegetable patch 69 on the way to laziness




by Did67 » 30/08/21, 23:05

Thank you!

[You see which wafer has become my memory - I liked this story and then I forgot]

[No miracle for "Père Michel": the years with mildew, it is not enough to mulch ...]
1 x
Biobomb
I posted 500 messages!
I posted 500 messages!
posts: 681
Registration: 02/10/20, 21:13
x 141

Re: Small vegetable patch 69 on the way to laziness




by Biobomb » 30/08/21, 23:18

Did67 wrote:
[You see which wafer has become my memory - I liked this story and then I forgot]



You haven't thought of the ditty: Mother Michel lost her cat. And Father Michel his tomatoes.
1 x
User avatar
alkaline
I understand econologic
I understand econologic
posts: 170
Registration: 12/06/19, 18:49
Location: Monts du Lyonnais
x 52

Re: Small vegetable patch 69 on the way to laziness




by alkaline » 30/08/21, 23:22

Did67 wrote:Thank you!
[No miracle for "Père Michel": the years with mildew, it is not enough to mulch ...]
especially since he had left with the idea of ​​the heat wave again this year and at the start of the season he had even put on a shade sail. ..but no rain roof.
0 x
it depends
Biobomb
I posted 500 messages!
I posted 500 messages!
posts: 681
Registration: 02/10/20, 21:13
x 141

Re: Small vegetable patch 69 on the way to laziness




by Biobomb » 30/08/21, 23:24

Did67 wrote:What are "Père Michel" tomatoes again ???


Didier, if you remember, could you give us the name of yours and their ability to resist attacks of all kinds this year please?
0 x
User avatar
alkaline
I understand econologic
I understand econologic
posts: 170
Registration: 12/06/19, 18:49
Location: Monts du Lyonnais
x 52

Re: Small vegetable patch 69 on the way to laziness




by alkaline » 30/08/21, 23:31

Spontaneous tomato, it grows in the city in a crack in the sidewalk ...
2021-08-26 18.08.51.jpg
Urban tomato
2 x
it depends
User avatar
Did67
Moderator
Moderator
posts: 20362
Registration: 20/01/08, 16:34
Location: Alsace
x 8685

Re: Small vegetable patch 69 on the way to laziness




by Did67 » 31/08/21, 09:06

Biobombe wrote:Didier, if you remember, could you give us the name of yours and their ability to resist attacks of all kinds this year please?


I'm editing my video on the subject, where you'll see them.

I have everything, a majority of "classic" tomatoes (more or less qualified as old), the seeds of which are of my own production.

I have spontaneous liftings.

I have a few hybrids (in fact this year I missed a lot of seedlings - bags opened for 3 or 4 or 5 or 6 years, it has not germinated) "classic" - type Maestria (Fandango did not sprouted).

I have a few purchased plants, usually more "modern" hybrids - more resistant varieties.

I have grafted tomatoes. And others not grafted.

I have a few "untouched" control feet - neither staked nor pruned.

Almost everything has been "treated" in the same way: between mid-July and the end of July, alternations of potassium bicarbonate, "Frutogard" (a phosphonate), Bacillus subtilis ...

And all this, a bit at random, in:

- exterior with shade in the morning
- outside with sun in the morning
- greenhouse closed in spring (early varieties, grafted or not)
- open tunnel ("umbrella"), all kinds of varieties, grafted or not
- in "shambles" in other cultures

The verdict is final: outside the tunnel, everything is more or less under attack. Rather severely in general. You can therefore take all the modalities indicated, nothing really "works" (if you want to protect your tomatoes!)

The severity of the attacks varies, however: it is maximum with the classic varieties in the shade in the morning and mini (still edible fruits, leaves or shoots still green) in the sun, the Berao variety defends itself, and Maestria barely.
In the tunnel, I have between a few attacks without loss of the fruits on classic varieties ("heart of beef", Bernese rose, black of Crimea, of Berao) up to nickel feet from top to bottom ("modern" hybrids ").

Note, to my great regret, I did not have ultra-resistant. Exactly one foot from Defiant. Who ended up in the tunnel !!! (it's not clever - but it is the consequence of my labeling by numbers and plantings "at random" without knowing what it is so as not to induce any bias / except of course, the purchased plants).

I do not doubt, in view of the testimonies, including yours, that some "ultra" would have, outdoors, pulled out of the game ... But in dehros of that, only one solution: an open roof on the side (in the greenhouse more closed, the mildew is controlled, but the alternaria, less "lethal", developed this year in me).

There you go, in scoop.
1 x

 


  • Similar topics
    Replies
    views
    Last message

Back to "Agriculture: problems and pollution, new techniques and solutions"

Who is online ?

Users browsing this forum : LudoThePotagiste and 311 guests