I only wish that that were true. In our field experience, both here in Elsinore and also L.A., we both have to prune in order to get better fruit and foliage. I would much rather have a maintenance free garden. Between the two of us, we usually grow over 15 different varieties of tomatoes (which really is too many lol), but some really need pruning or they will easily reach over 8ft tall. Roma tomatoes need to be pruned just to be able to reach through the growth to harvest in addition too allowing more sun into the center of the plant. Thanks for the link, I will be checking it out...
I live waaaaay up north. I wonder if that has a lot to do with it? I find this fascinating to be honest, but I'm seriously nerdy. Overall, the gardenweb community is amazing.
I don't grow that many per season in terms of varieties, but I have been growing them for a while. This was also a theory I grew up with, so seeing what I grew up with, and what was doing well in my own garden, I was confused about this so I did a paper on it, tested it and etc. The tomatoes I grew for this experiment were also greenhouse grown- I did go over that on my paper I remember but it would be interesting to see the difference comparing ones grown outdoors to those grown in a greenhouse and what pruning would do.
What varieties that you grow stand out for you? I have to tell you that Roma, even the variants on the theme, have all just been so terrible for me. I have other paste types that do okay, but overall I don't grow paste types well for some reason in general. I tend to lean towards multi-purpose slicer types, even for sauce and paste, but I have to grow a LOT of them (which really isn't that big of a problem). I also love this heirloom movement, which has encouraged me to be more adventerous with the types I've been trying, but I only have two that I love to the point of growing them year after year. One is a non-labeled one I got for free many, many years ago in a trade off of gardenweb. I've asked what others thought it might be in the past, and "pineapple" seems to be the closest thing I can find to what it might be. I also love stump of the world, the only dark tomato that I've been able to enjoy (and I've tried many). I'm going to try out some regular old big round red tomatoes this year too, as that's what my husband wants. I have a few types of seed in this description.