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2007-06-03 09:23:55 · 5 answers · asked by 3 in Science & Mathematics Botany

5 answers

Some tomato plants are indeterminate, and will continue growing as long as they have the right growing conditions.

2007-06-03 09:54:30 · answer #1 · answered by justjennith 5 · 0 0

Tomato seeds have a maturity time on the package which tells the number of days from planting the seeds to harvesting. 80 or 90 days is about the time for tomatoes if my memory is correct. So just subtract the number of days since your babies were born from 90 and you will have an idea when they will be ripe .Off hand I would say you have a couple months to go before they are big, ripe and juicy. I love tomatoes in particular heritage tomatoes like Red Brandywine. Try those sometime, you will taste the difference. But the bad news is I loved them too much and ate them by the gallon. Now I have an allegic contact dermatitus to fresh tomatoes that will put me on prednisone shots and pills for two weeks. It never will go away but only gets worse with each exposure. Hands and face swell so I look like Quasimoto then when the swelling goes down, I peel my skin off like a rubber glove. Don't eat too many and if you itch --stop.

2016-05-20 03:43:52 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

1 summer

2007-06-03 09:26:59 · answer #3 · answered by rosie recipe 7 · 1 0

A few months.

2007-06-03 09:31:06 · answer #4 · answered by shermynewstart 7 · 0 0

IN CENTRAL MISSOURI,
outside --they average 5 months....

2007-06-03 11:11:44 · answer #5 · answered by hoodoobluesman 2 · 0 0

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