mistaken identity?

Sum­mer in my gar­den began offi­cially on Wednes­day, June 25 at approx­i­mately 6:35 p.m., when I held in my hands the first ripe tomato of the sea­son. Here’s a shot of the fourth tomato, from yes­ter­day. Seems like a cou­ple of large two-legged mam­mals invaded the gar­den and ate the first three…

My Mr. StripeyI’ve said a cou­ple unkind words against the moun­strously vig­or­ous Mr. Stripey, but that’s the vari­ety that bore first this year. The fruits so far have been small, about three ounces, sweet and extremely mild, with a very thin skin. The color is a rich, medium yel­low, with dark rosy-red flush­ing to the fruits both inside and out. So far they don’t gush clas­sic tomato fla­vor, but they’re still the best toma­toes I’ve had since last autumn’s farmer’s markets.

The fact that this is the first vari­ety to bear this year con­fuses me a bit. Mr. Stripey is usu­ally listed as being a large, beef­steak, late-season tomato, bear­ing 80–85 days after being set out. Some sources men­tion that the vari­ety often sold as Mr. Stripey is actu­ally the smaller-fruited Tigerella, and sev­eral sites list their plants with both names. How unhelp­ful is that? If I can judge by pho­tos of both vari­eties, mine looks much closer to the true Mr. Stripey, even though the fruit is small. What do you think?

A cou­ple Mr. Stripey images on the web:
Mr Stripey
[ source ] [ source ]
Ver­sus a cou­ple Tigerella images on the web:
Tigerella Tigerella
[ source ] [ source ]

Most sources list Tigerella as also being a late-bearing vari­ety, so mis­taken iden­tity would have had lit­tle to do with my see­ing the fruits towards the start of tomato season.

The thing that con­fuses me most about the iden­tity of the toma­toes in the gar­den is the fact that Mr. Stripey sits about four feet away in the bed from the hybrid Early Girl. I planted the hybrid on the same day as Mr. Stripey, mainly to get some early toma­toes and to get a head start on sum­mer. The Early Girl label says it should bear 50 days from being set out, and that’s been a rea­son­able esti­mate based on my past expe­ri­ence grow­ing it. This sea­son, even though Early Girl has a half dozen fairly nicely-sized fruits on its branches, they’re all still as green as the leaves. Fifty days from being set out? Not even close.

So, instead of con­clud­ing that Mr. Stripey came with the wrong label, I’m start­ing to won­der if I don’t have an impos­tor try­ing to pass as Early Girl. Maybe some dis­grun­tled Home Depot employee switched the tags? Or their sup­plier decided a red tomato is a red tomato and no one’s going to know the dif­fer­ence? This wouldn’t be the first time I got some­thing other than what the label said.

Even though there’s a cer­tain amount of vari­a­tion from plant to plant–it’s prob­a­bly a lit­tle unfair to eval­u­ate an entire tomato vari­ety with just one plant–I doubt that the vari­a­tion would explain the dif­fer­ences I’ve seen. Time for CSI San Diego. Time for some back­yard DNA testing…

All that said, I guess I’ve made a strong case for buy­ing seed from a rep­utable grower–and then care­fully label­ing the seedlings!

June 28 2008 | Categories: my gardenplant profiles | Tags: | 4 Comments »