Watching bees and butterflies with their hairy legs clothed
in gold pollen pantaloons as they buzz my garden fascinates me. While I do not
want to let my leg hairs grow until they can collect yellow nodules of plant
magic, I have joined the effort to pollinate my tomato blooms.
Last year, I optimistically planted 15 tomato and 12 pepper
plants in our raised-bed garden. In the early, hopeful part of summer, I anticipated
making quarts and quarts of salsa to fill empty pantry shelves to bulging. Sadly,
I harvested 15 tomatoes the whole summer. The heat decimated my garden, leaving
my jars and pantry empty.
This year, I risked early frost to plant six carefully selected tomato plants as well as
two pepper plants in early April To further
guarantee more than a 15 tomato harvest, I planted three rows of flowers—one
each of zinnias, cosmos, and bachelor buttons—to encourage more bees and
butterflies to visit my prairie oasis.
So far, my efforts have been fruitful. We have harvested
dozens of tomatoes with more on the vine. The dilemma is the heat. It tends to
prevent pollination and thus, a ongoing crop.
I have read about heat’s effect on tomato development.
However, I have not determined whether it is a result of heat affecting
developing tomatoes or the temperature’s effect on insects that fertilize
blossoms.
To determine the solution, I decided to play pollinator. No,
I didn’t let my leg hairs grow to collect pollen to transfer from one blossom
to another. I robbed my watercolor box of its paintbrush.
With watercolor brush in hand, I visit my garden in dawn’s
cool temperatures. Moving from bloom to bloom, I tickle stamens and pistils of tomato
blossoms to assist resident pollinators. I also give the blossoms a little
vibrating shake to trick them into thinking I am a great big bee or butterfly
doing its job.
My big dilemma is that I cannot tell if the reason I have
more tomatoes is that I planted rows of flowers to attract more insects to my
garden or if it is because I use a paintbrush to transfer pollen from one plant
to another.
I do know that it is as hot day and night this summer as
last, so something I am doing has made a difference in tomato production. We
have harvested enough ripe fruit to make fresh salsa, tomato soup, BLT’s, along
with a dessert of salted and peppered sliced tomatoes.
My hope is that six tomato plants will produce enough fruit
to can a dozen jars of salsa. More than that is an overflow of blessings.
Regardless of whether an insect or paintbrush filament is
pollinating my six plants this, tomatoes dangle from vines like green Christmas
balls. That beats the heck out of 15 lovely plants producing nothing but green
leaves and tomato worms.
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