Flying the flag for the home-grown tomato

I WAS interested to read in your 50 years ago column that “Tomato growing in England was doomed” (The Press, May 11) and am pleased to confirm that the UK tomato industry still exists.

May 21 to 27 marks British Tomato Week. Packs should be specially labelled and growers will be displaying in Parliament to highlight our home-grown industry. Unfortunately, most tomatoes are imported, so you do have to look out for the British product. There are still 34 growers in the UK producing great tasting fruit, many in Yorkshire and the north east.

The report 50 years ago believed it would be considered archaic to grow tomatoes in heated glasshouses when they could be grown outdoors in the sun and flown from Italy in hours.

This could not be further from the truth.

While there are great growers in Spain, Italy and Portugal, they don’t grow in plastic greenhouses and their product then spends up to a week on the road to get here. A home-grown tomato is in your kitchen before a Spanish tomato has even reached the Barcelona bypass.

I hope that in 50 years time you are able to report about the great home-grown industry we have, a large degree of which is based within 50 miles of York.

Nigel Bartle, Chairman, British Tomato Growers Association, Earlsborough Terrace, York.

Comments(4)

Buzz Light-year says...
11:26am Sat 19 May 12

Excellent letter, good sentiments.
I will be more selective in future.

Yorkborneinbse says...
2:52pm Sat 19 May 12

Totally agree, British Sugar, who once had a site in York has been growing tomatoes for years now in the South East. Take a look

http://www.britishsu
gar.co.uk/Tomatoes.a
spx

ColdAsChristmas says...
4:21pm Sat 19 May 12

I'm a fan of all products British, except for climate scientists and their disciples, trading fresh air. Being a grower of outdoor tomatoes for thirty years I can say how wonderful crops were during the 80's and 90's and I dare say would have been in the 70's if I was growing tomatoes then. Unfortunately most of the last half dozen years the crops have been wiped out with blight. Up to today (19th May) with a top temperature of 9C (48F) it is impossible to plant outdoors, even the bedding plants. Until we come out of this cooling cycle we may have to resort to growing tomatoes the commercial way, under plastic. A poor substitute.

purpletimbo says...
5:12pm Sat 19 May 12

Bought some today from Morrisons, large or small, large ones were very tasty, union jack and where they were grown on packaging, easy to spot

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