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Zapatay
Senior Member
Posts: 210
Joined: Fri Jun 05, 2009 1:10 pm
Location: 5a - Northern IL, WI border

Will these little guys make it thru Zone 5a summer

Neighbor had three very small tomato plants which she left on my steps. My tomato plants are large - very large - compared to these little guys.

What do you think? Do you think they'll make a shorter zone 5a - Southern WI, Norther IL summer?

The space was orginally meant for green peppers but since the little ones were fragile, I quickly planted them...

Might be hard to see them - right in the middle.

The other little ones you see are misc annual flowers that neighbor did not have a home for (?)

[img]https://i135.photobucket.com/albums/q157/zapatay/garden060810.jpg[/img]

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nes
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Posts: 631
Joined: Mon Jun 22, 2009 10:20 am
Location: Rural Ottawa, ON

Since my dogs killed my tomato seedlings (also my strawberries, a pepper, they are in big trouble...) I had to re-start them Aprilish. Mine are as big as yours but now growing like STINK.

I think we'll be okay.

I planted left-over seedlings last year in July and still got a few tomatoes, but we had the darkest year on record (no sun!) so it was a bad year for veggies, otherwise I think I would have actually gotten a whole harvest.

Actually those toms were really hardy - I kept 2 over the winter and they are back in my garden still growing away (little experiment of mine ;))

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stella1751
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Posts: 1494
Joined: Mon Jul 13, 2009 8:40 am
Location: Wyoming

nes wrote:Since my dogs killed my tomato seedlings (also my strawberries, a pepper, they are in big trouble...) I had to re-start them Aprilish. Mine are as big as yours but now growing like STINK.

I think we'll be okay.
My dogs did the same thing! They are so darned old and it's been so long since they erred that I foolishly trusted them. I watered the seedlings with a fish emulsion dilute in their trays and came out about an hour later to total, wanton destruction and two innocent-looking dogs with soil crumbs clinging to their gray lips.

There's gotta be a doggie rehab for mutts addicted to fish emulsion.

Anyway, most of the tomato seedlings survived, but just in case, I started five new seedlings on April 16. One actually snapped off in its pot during a wind gust, but the other four were planted Sunday. I've done this before in Zone 4 and done pretty well. I fully expect these seedlings to catch up with the ones I planted on May 10, because they grew next to nothing in our cold, inhospitable soil.

I think we'll all be fine :-)



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