Just like a couple going on their honeymoon, but each going to a different Hotel . . .
I’ve written about Artificial Insemination before and have yet to be sued for malpractice or even threatened with a law suit. And so, here goes again. And my method is absolutely infallible. Time tested.
Of course, the fact that it happens to be Tomato Plants I tell about might be the reason for such indifference, but just the same, if you plant a few tomato plants in your back yard, and grow beautiful vines, but no tomatoes, try my method. It works like a dream.
I blundered upon this solution one year when I bought 4 or 5 tomato plants which had small tomatoes already formed. They grew into beautiful red globes, but, though the bushes continued to blossom, there were no more tomatoes.
Yes, they were getting enough sun. Yes, I watered them and yes, I cultivated and even fertilized the soil, but still no fruit.
What I had forgotten, oh foolish me, was that it ‘takes two to tango’, and for two of the same species to create another of their ilk, the rules must be followed.
Yeah, I knew about the birds and bees, the boys and girls, and even the fish in the sea. But tomatoes? Frankly, I hadn’t given it a thought, and had to be reminded by one wiser than I, that if you have only one or two plants, spaced far apart, they just can’t do what they’re supposed to be doing, and will remain sterile.
Just like a couple going on their honeymoon, but each going to a different Hotel.
So, with fewer than a dozen words, that maven, my wise-one, gave me the secret to backyard failures and backyard triumphs. And now I am an agricultural specialist and pass the information along to you. Pay heed and you too, will become an expert.
Each day the gardener must stroll from one tomato plant to another with a Q-tip in hand, and gently, gently. touch each blossom with the cotton tip and then go to the next blossom and do the same, with the same Q-tip. and repeat the soft touch. Spreading the good stuff around, don’t you see? Oh, and be sure to keep that same Q-tip to use every day, again and again and again.
It works and this spring your tomato blossoms won’t dry up and fall uselessly to the ground, but soon there will be a tiny tomato sitting there, needing only time to develop into one you will take to your table. Or eat right there and then.
I always thought such impregnation techniques had to be performed by highly trained people, wearing white sterile clothing, etc. etc. But this spring, knowing nothing about reproduction (well, hardly nothing) you will be doing that marvelous job as well as a pro.
My mother and dad could have used the wisdom of my teacher, as I did. They had a beautiful cherry tree and each year that tree bloomed profusely, but nary even one cherry developed. Years later I read that certain trees, cherries included, have both male and female trees, and at least one of each must be planted close to each other before pollination can occur.
At one time, in what was then a vacant yard, and now Bill and Nina’s home, I had a Pie Cherry tree side by side with a Bing Tree. And had more fruit than I could ever have eaten and gave most of it away. And there, with a male and female tree, it worked.
Every farmer knows that a few long rows of corn won’t produce, but the very same number of stalks, bunched cozily together, will produce ears and ears of corn. The wind, which is the pollinator for corn, whips the precious ‘stuff’ into the air, but if the stalks aren’t right handy, the vital ingredient drops uselessly to the ground.
Even for tomatoes, you gotta have togetherness for the ‘birds and bees’ thing to work naturally. And so, this summer, if people see you . . . with Q-tip in hand . . . going from tomato plant to another tomato plant, they will know you’re doing your job of matchmaker.
No, you won’t be in a doctor’s white coat, or in a sterile laboratory, or have expensive equipment in hand, but this method works, and you will have tomatoes by the dozen. Sometimes I amaze myself at the folk-lore that someone learns, passes along, and we all eat better because of it.
ethelbrad@comcast.net
So very true. They even have spray that sets the blooms now and I am far from an expert of what on the shelves these days
Hi Marie, and thanx for the ‘spray’ idea. Aren’t we smart? Have y ou and Dean been out of town? I miss you when I don’t see you out puttering in youf yard. Thnx again for your reply. Luv ya. ethel
At our house we call it the rites of summer, walking around our ‘mater plants and giving each one a fertilizing shake making sure the blossoms get to know one another in th biblical sence. You’re right it takes two. It seems certain of our society think they can start and raise a family without such action. ‘Can’t be done. I loved your narrative, a great lesson.
Last year I had a slightly different problem: I had plenty of tomatoes, most of them full size, but they never got ripe. All but one or two stayed green until rot time in the fall or until the birds got to them.
Any ideas on this?