Lycopersicon lycopersicum L.
Brand: Semena Altaja
Packaged:5 s.
Availability:In Stock
3.65€
Ex Tax: 2.95€
Tomato "Little Boar" F1.
All-weather heavyweight! Large fruits even in heat and drought.
A mid-early (100-110 days) hybrid that guarantees a harvest when other varieties give up. The plant is compact but very powerful.
Characteristics:
Bush type: Determinant (compact).
Fruits: Dark red, round, firm, and smooth. Impressive weight for this type of bush — 250-300 g.
Hybrid value:
1. Stress resistance: Sets fruit perfectly at high temperatures, possesses cold resistance and drought tolerance.
2. Quality: Excellent taste. Recommended for fresh consumption and processing.

MASTER CLASS: EARLY HARVEST.
It's all about the roots.
If the root system is well developed, the bushes grow fast and strong. The simplest way to increase root volume is by burying the stem during planting.
Suitable for: Tall (indeterminate) varieties, where the first truss appears high (above the 7th-9th leaf).
NOT suitable for: If you bury low-growing (super-determinant) or medium (determinant) tomatoes, the flower trusses will end up on the ground, leading to rot.

Two roots — one bush (Grafting).
To strengthen medium-sized (determinant) tomatoes, approach grafting is used.
The Essence: Fuse the stems of two plants, then remove the top of one. The remaining bush receives nutrition from two roots. This results in accelerated ripening, large uniform fruits, and weather resistance.
Instructions:
1. Wait for the 4-5 leaf stage.
2. In the center of the internodes of two adjacent plants, cut a strip of skin (4 cm long, 1/3 diameter wide). Use a sharp, sterile blade.
3. Connect the cuts, wrap tightly with raffia or film.
4. After 1.5-2 weeks (after fusion), cut off the top of the unneeded plant (in 2 stages with an interval of 3-5 days). Remove the bandage.
Tip: When planting in the ground, temporarily wrap the graft site so tissues don't tear. The removed top can be rooted in water or substrate (cut at a right angle, dust with charcoal).

Note: Why do green tomatoes crack?
There are usually two reasons: excess moisture or excess nitrogen in the soil. Remember: nitrogen overdose is possible not only from mineral fertilizers. Popular chicken manure is very rich in active nitrogen, so feed tomatoes with it very carefully!

Write a review

Note: HTML is not translated!