|
Post by bluelacedredhead on Aug 11, 2010 17:55:46 GMT -5
Well, we know that you do, Darth ;D
|
|
jcm05
Administrator
Posts: 1,685
|
Post by jcm05 on Aug 11, 2010 19:31:15 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by GunnarSK on Nov 8, 2010 16:04:31 GMT -5
I haven't seen any apricot flesh or stripes, but there is a chance, since I have seeds for Persimmon and a segregating Persimmon based cross.
|
|
|
Post by flowerpower on Nov 9, 2010 9:59:45 GMT -5
That is a nice shaped mater on that first pic. I just love the color on the yellow flesh/clear skin in the F5's above. Very bright.
|
|
|
Post by GunnarSK on Nov 9, 2010 13:46:22 GMT -5
most people would call it a "white" In August in Denmark I bought an Organic Tomato Mix from Italy and saved seeds from some fruit, also yellow. Probably the fruit were treeated by a copper-based fungicide (you can still call them organic), and they may be F1s, but with these colours it is still interesting to see what comes out. This is my only picture, and I didn't check if the yellow one had clear skin, but it sure looked light.
|
|
PVP
Tomatophile
head spellerer
Only an Amateur
Posts: 798
|
Post by PVP on Nov 9, 2010 16:18:18 GMT -5
internet photos obscure color from "real life" most people would call it a "white" These are the "whitest" tomatoes I ever grew. In sunlight they actually appear cream white. Inside, as seen in this picture, you see them more as very pale yellow. Their parentage is Brandywine x a regular leaf gf tomato. I'm growing out all potato leaf sister lines. The others are red flesh with clear skin and gf maroon with clear skin. I think Keith also got some yellow tomatoes from a Brandywine x Cherokee Purple cross. What gene interplay makes the pale yellow ("white") segregation appear? pv
|
|
|
Post by frogsleapfarm on Nov 16, 2010 21:15:21 GMT -5
probably a stupid question, but where's the gallery?
|
|
jcm05
Administrator
Posts: 1,685
|
Post by jcm05 on Jul 14, 2011 11:32:38 GMT -5
In the top photo they all appear to be different colors. Is that due primarily to epidermis color or does the high pigment gene play a role? The Striped Apricot I'm growing look very similar to the fruit on the far right. More yellow/gold looking.
|
|