โApr-30-2016 05:10 PM
โMay-01-2016 09:30 AM
โMay-01-2016 09:09 AM
โApr-30-2016 08:54 PM
โApr-30-2016 08:02 PM
BB_TX wrote:Murphsmom wrote:BB_TX wrote:TexasShadow wrote:
nothing beats a home grown tomato ๐
So true. Mine are about 4-6 weeks away.
I have bought grocery store organic tomatoes, and "regular" tomatoes. Can't tell the difference. Both marginally adequate at best.
Yikes! I may think about planting mine in the next week or two. Harvest will be late August through October, if I'm lucky.
Yeah, but when mine have already burned up in 100+ temps, you will be harvesting. ๐
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โApr-30-2016 07:50 PM
Murphsmom wrote:BB_TX wrote:TexasShadow wrote:
nothing beats a home grown tomato ๐
So true. Mine are about 4-6 weeks away.
I have bought grocery store organic tomatoes, and "regular" tomatoes. Can't tell the difference. Both marginally adequate at best.
Yikes! I may think about planting mine in the next week or two. Harvest will be late August through October, if I'm lucky.
โApr-30-2016 06:24 PM
โApr-30-2016 06:21 PM
BB_TX wrote:TexasShadow wrote:
nothing beats a home grown tomato ๐
So true. Mine are about 4-6 weeks away.
I have bought grocery store organic tomatoes, and "regular" tomatoes. Can't tell the difference. Both marginally adequate at best.
โApr-30-2016 06:19 PM
TexasShadow wrote:
nothing beats a home grown tomato ๐
โApr-30-2016 06:03 PM
Jim Shoe wrote:
I just ate an organic tomato with my dinner. That's what the package said. I'm just wondering what an inorganic tomato tastes like? Or do organic tomatoes just cost more?
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โApr-30-2016 05:31 PM
โApr-30-2016 05:20 PM