JenniferDuBay
Songster
Excellent!!!!![]()
Believe it or not, there was a Red Wings sticker in my locker in middle school (I didn't put it there, found it there). (This was in Atlanta, Georgia, early 80s.)
Yay!!!!!
I'm getting a bit of a late start so I bought transplants - just potted them all up in gallon pots (burying most of the stem) to get them to develop as many roots as possible. It's the only practical way for them to survive the summer (When I plant them, I'll plant sideways and bury most of the stem.) Around here, I don't bother putting them in the ground before March 1 unless I'm prepared to easily protect form frost at a moment's notice. Which I'm not. So pots it is until mid-March (when the beds will be ready anyway).
- Ant Farm
Have you tried everglades tomatoes? They're a wild type from around here, but the best part is after the first year, they're self seeding. The tomatoes are very tiny- smaller than a grape, but the taste is intense, and they can really take the heat.


