Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My grape and cherry tomatoes come back each year. Not as over wintered, but as volunteers because we don't harvest every single tomato. Someone told me volunteer tomato plants do not produce fruit but I can tell you that is false. I planted one grape and one cherry tomato plant seven years ago, now we have a grape tomato farm each year. They grown easily 8-12ft tall and produce like crazy.
I keep mint and raspberry shrubs in large planters. They come back every year too, but I do not want them to spread.
The volunteers usually do produce fruit, but what you may have been told is that if your parent plant was a hybrid, you will for sure get a different plant from the seed. Also, even if an heirloom, the seed may produce a new variety due to cross pollination and if it is excellent read up onseed saving to preserve the new variety). Some, like yellow pear, come reliably from volunteer seed. Sometimes the plant produced will be barren.
Very interesting, thank you. I was for sure told to pull volunteers because they do not fruit. At most I transplant them to better areas so my plants have spacing.
I will add yellow pear to the garden this year.
Anonymous wrote:New gardner here -
When you say overwinter - does that apply to container gardening? Can I just leave them in the containers on the deck or do they need to be planted in ground? SHould I water through winter?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My grape and cherry tomatoes come back each year. Not as over wintered, but as volunteers because we don't harvest every single tomato. Someone told me volunteer tomato plants do not produce fruit but I can tell you that is false. I planted one grape and one cherry tomato plant seven years ago, now we have a grape tomato farm each year. They grown easily 8-12ft tall and produce like crazy.
I keep mint and raspberry shrubs in large planters. They come back every year too, but I do not want them to spread.
The volunteers usually do produce fruit, but what you may have been told is that if your parent plant was a hybrid, you will for sure get a different plant from the seed. Also, even if an heirloom, the seed may produce a new variety due to cross pollination and if it is excellent read up onseed saving to preserve the new variety). Some, like yellow pear, come reliably from volunteer seed. Sometimes the plant produced will be barren.
Anonymous wrote:My grape and cherry tomatoes come back each year. Not as over wintered, but as volunteers because we don't harvest every single tomato. Someone told me volunteer tomato plants do not produce fruit but I can tell you that is false. I planted one grape and one cherry tomato plant seven years ago, now we have a grape tomato farm each year. They grown easily 8-12ft tall and produce like crazy.
I keep mint and raspberry shrubs in large planters. They come back every year too, but I do not want them to spread.
Anonymous wrote:Is there something that looks like French tarragon but isn't? Or did my tarragon somehow come back, but without much scent?
Anonymous wrote:Is there something that looks like French tarragon but isn't? Or did my tarragon somehow come back, but without much scent?