desertlady
Attractive To Bees
Lots of volunteers are showing up, I think they are cherry tomatoes, I can use those to feed my chickies! (very spoiled chickies!) 
Journey!!journey11 said:Got 'em all planted today... 56 tomato plants, 26 different varieties! :bun
Sorry it took so long to reply as I missed your post. I see absolutely no difference in taste, in fact, the greenhouse tomatoes ripen better than the garden tomatoes. I have grown them indoors in the winter and they were fantastic. Growing hydroponically, I do not have a problem with white flies, or any other insects for that matter. Here is a photo of the tomatoes from last winter, they are a greenhouse variety named Trust. I started picking them at the end of November, and as I recall I got sixteen tomatoes from each plant.catjac1975 said:jackB- How do the greenhouse tomatoes taste compared to the outdoor?
I grew them several winters, using varieties recommended for greenhouse growing. Though it was fun to have a few tomatoes I think I got about 2 dozen. They were not as good as fresh grown outdoors. They were not worth all the trouble considering the time but I loved doing it anyway for the fun of it. I only stopped because I got a white fly infestation that was too hard to control and jeopardized my spring seedlings.

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I ran a length of chicken wire along the walkway to push them back to where they came from, so they undulated into the eggplant and are threatening to strangle them in the perfect tomato homicide crime.
They are loaded with tiny green future cherry tomatoes, so as long as they turn red and we can eat them, they can do what they durn well please!
