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Tomato lovers, rejoice. Tomatomania! is back

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Tomato lovers, rejoice. Tomatomania! is back

Have your winter salads of greens and extra greens gotten so uninteresting that you simply’ve stooped to purchasing tasteless hot-house tomatoes simply so as to add a little coloration to your plate?

Assistance is on the way in which. Tomatomania! is gearing up for 2022 with 200-plus types of tomatoes and practically 100 sorts of peppers, on sale beginning Feb. 25 at Roger’s Gardens in Corona del Mar.

This annual touring present will go to 9 SoCal places this yr between San Diego and Santa Barbara counties, with many types persevering with to be accessible on the venues by means of Might.

February might be chilly for planting tomatoes in inland components of Southern California, says Tomatomania! proprietor Scott Daigre, however not for the extra temperate coastal areas, the place frost is never a priority.

Tomatoes are a warm-season crop, which like peppers and basil, want soil temperatures above 60 levels Fahrenheit to actually begin rising with gusto. However for those who’re aching to get going in your summer season bounty, Daigre says your seedlings can be simply positive of their 4-inch pots for just a few weeks, till the soil warms up. Simply maintain them watered in a heat, sunny spot.

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A colourful sampling of Tomatomania!’s greater than 200 types of tomatoes.

(Scott Daigre)

For those who’re rising tomatoes in containers, you will get a head begin, as a result of the soil will get hotter a lot faster in pots. Simply make certain to decide on a big container for every plant, ideally not less than 24 inches deep, so the roots have loads of room to develop, and maintain the pot in a location that will get not less than six to eight hours of solar a day.

The largest problem with Tomatomania! is deciding which varieties to decide on. And boy, does Daigre have varieties to supply, in a rainbow of colours similar to:

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  • Bronze Torch, an elongated cherry selection and the 2022 tomato of the yr
  • Saucy Mary, a stripy, lime-green early producer
  • Paul Robeson, a blackish-red heirloom beefsteak selection
  • Pinocchio, a deep-orange heirloom Roma selection with a protracted, pointy finish
  • Momotaro, a flavorful pinkish-red Japanese hybrid

Bronze Torch, a hybrid named for its brick-red coloration striped in inexperienced and bronze, does properly within the floor or containers, Daigre mentioned, and produces yummy fruit in simply 65 days.

“I traveled with little bundles of this tomato final yr, asking folks what they thought, and jaws dropped.”

Scott Daigre, Tomatomania! proprietor

That’s a few of the standards wanted to be chosen tomato of the yr, he mentioned. “We wish to see good, stable manufacturing and taste, and this one tastes wonderful. I traveled with little bundles of this tomato final yr, asking folks what they thought, and jaws dropped and eyes opened vast as a result of this cherry [tomato] was so totally different and so good.”

One other bonus: Bronze Torch will begin producing in early spring and proceed into the autumn. “It saved moving into my backyard [in Ojai] endlessly,” Daigre mentioned. “I’ve made every little thing with them. … I roasted them and made salsas and salads. Technically, it’s a cherry tomato, nevertheless it doesn’t have the sugar stage {that a} Sungold has, so the flavour is extra complicated. It’s very distinctive.”

Roger’s Gardens has made selecting just a little simpler by itemizing many Tomatomania! varieties on its web site. Orders have to be picked up at its Corona del Mar retailer, but when that’s too far, you’ll be able to not less than get an concept of what’s coming to a venue close to you, Daigre mentioned.

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The place to purchase Tomatomania!’s distinctive varieties

Listed below are the upcoming gross sales dates, listed by county. Observe that the majority venues (besides Fig Earth Provide) can have prolonged gross sales after their preliminary weekends, with fewer selections however nonetheless a big number of crops.

That was a giant lesson from the COVID-19 pandemic, Daigre mentioned. Tomatomania!’s gross sales was once crowded occasions with workshops and lengthy traces. Tomato lovers nonetheless needed the selection however not the crowds throughout the pandemic, he mentioned, so Tomatomania! tailored by creating opening-weekend gross sales with 200-plus varieties after which providing a extra restricted choice for a number of weeks after.

Los Angeles County

March 11-13
Fig Earth Provide, 3577 N. Figueroa St., Los Angeles, 9:30 a.m. to five p.m. (closes at 4 p.m. March 13).

March 18-20
Tapia Brothers Farm, 5251 Hayvenhurst Ave., Encino, 9 a.m. to five p.m.

Orange County

Feb. 25-March 6
Roger’s Gardens, 2301 San Joaquin Hills Street, Corona del Mar, 9 a.m. to five p.m.

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San Diego County

March 5-6
Mission Hills Nursery, 1525 Fort Stockton Drive, San Diego, 8 a.m. to five p.m.

Santa Barbara County

April 2
Seaside Gardens, 3700 Through Actual, Carpinteria, 9 a.m. to five p.m.

Ventura County

March 11-12
Otto & Sons Nursery, 1835 E. Guiberson Street, Fillmore, 8 a.m to 4 p.m.

March 25-27
Underwood Farm Middle, 3370 Sundown Valley Street, Moorpark, 9 a.m. to five p.m.

April 1
Wachter’s Hay & Grain, 114 S. Montgomery St., Ojai.

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April 9-10
Underwood Farm Market, 5696 E. Los Angeles Ave., Somis, 9 a.m. to five p.m.

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Do You Believe in Life After Death? These Scientists Study It.

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Do You Believe in Life After Death? These Scientists Study It.

Upon arrival at the family’s home, the team was shown into the kitchen. A child, who was three, the youngest of four home-schooled siblings, peeked from behind her mother’s legs, looking up shyly. She wore a baggy Minnie Mouse shirt and went to perch between her grandparents on a banquette, watching everyone take their seats around the dining table.

“Let’s start from the very beginning,” Dr. Tucker said after the paperwork had been signed by Misty, the child’s 28-year-old mother. “It all began with the puzzle piece?”

A few months earlier, mother and child had been looking at a wooden puzzle of the United States, with each state represented by a cartoon of a person or object. Misty’s daughter pointed excitedly at the jagged piece representing Illinois, which had an abstract illustration of Abraham Lincoln.

“That’s Pom,” her daughter exclaimed. “He doesn’t have his hat on.”

This was indeed a drawing of Abraham Lincoln without his hat, but more important, there was no name under the image indicating who he was. Following weeks of endless talk about “Pom” bleeding out after being hurt and being carried to a too-small bed — which the family had started to think could be related to Lincoln’s assassination — they began to consider that their daughter had been present for the historical moment. This was despite the family having no prior belief in reincarnation, nor any particular interest in Lincoln.

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On the drive to Amherst, Dr. Tucker confessed his hesitation in taking on this particular case — or any case connected to a famous individual. “If you say your child was Babe Ruth, for example, there would be lots of information online,” he said. “When we get those cases, usually it’s that the parents are into it. Still, it’s all a little strange to be coming out of a three-year-old’s mouth. Now if she had said her daughter was Lincoln, I probably wouldn’t have made the trip.”

Lately, Dr. Tucker has been giving the children picture tests. “Where we think we know the person they’re talking about, we’ll show them a picture from that life, and then show them another picture — a dummy picture — from somewhere else, to see if they can pick out the right one,” he said. “You have to have a few pictures for it to mean anything. I had one where the kid remembered dying in Vietnam. I showed him eight pairs of pictures and a couple of them he didn’t make any choice on, but the others he was six out of six. So, you know, that makes you think. But this girl is so young, that I don’t think we can do that.”

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L.A. Affairs: As a divorced mom, I was conflicted about dating. Until I met him

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L.A. Affairs: As a divorced mom, I was conflicted about dating. Until I met him

I was three years post-divorce, with a 12-year-old son and a newly adopted puppy, living in Park La Brea, where a community of single moms had come together. We were all free from the burden of marriage and entertained the idea of “getting back out there.” None of us had ever really dabbled with dating apps. We took the plunge together and began sending profiles of potential suitors around. We’d hype each other up for dates and then share hilarious post-date stories on group calls.

I was conflicted about dating. After my marriage had failed, I discovered I needed a lot of solo time to regenerate myself with regularity. I also didn’t want to bring anyone new into my son’s life for fear that he’d think another man had become my priority. I thought it would be fun to take a lover, but nothing serious. Ideally I could get dressed up once a week and go to a great restaurant or experience something fun in the city with zero expectations for the future and no strings attached.

My first app date was coffee with a drummer from a Midwest band I regularly saw in college. The conversation consisted of him endlessly name-dropping and asking zero questions about me. That made me ruthless in my swiping, inevitably resulting in corny app messages including “There are no more bees in your Hive.”

My three red flags for profile photos were: no photos on a step-and-repeat; no photos with a celebrity; and no photos cheers-ing with a drink. I had zero interest in dating anyone obsessed with stars or fame. Try steering clear of those in this city.

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The idea of dating again had me sobbing to a girlfriend while driving to my next date. She reminded me of my dating plan by saying, “It’s just one date.” Expecting the worst, I was surprised instead to meet a successful entrepreneur and triathlete with sexy curly hair, an empty nester who lived in the suburbs an hour north of L.A. We had matched because he happened to be in the city, and my five-mile radius setting allowed him to appear. However, we came from worlds apart.

Him: Married young, clean-cut professional, impeccable dresser, no TV watching, a generous philanthropist, up at 5 a.m. to work out daily. He was a go-getter, a ball of energy, and he knew virtually nothing about pop culture. He was an adult man with a retirement plan, which made him sexy.

Me: Married later, unconventional creative type, tattoos, a lover of colorful trendy clothes, a free spirit and, after decades of wild partying, sober.

We found each other equally fascinating. We were dating outside our boxes. It was intoxicating.

I had declared that I didn’t need a man or a relationship, but this guy was different. This magnificent man kept showing up with flowers, leaving sweet cards, washing my car and filling my fridge. He did what he said he was going to do and always picked up my calls. A giver, not a taker, he showed me how to be a true partner in a relationship. Bit by bit, I was falling in love, and our chemistry was euphoric.

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But even with all that, it soon became a game of Tetris, lining up the windows of time to spend together and where work, friends, parenting and solo-time pieces fit into the puzzle.

One date turned into three years of adventuring, monthly travels, new restaurants, cities, family weddings and concerts. He still drove into L.A. once or twice a week and most weekends, adding 240 miles and six hours of travel to the weekly grind. There were casual conversations about the future and even living together. I was committed to getting my son through high school. And then my life would be my own, so my typical response was: “Life will be wildly different in three years, and we’ll figure it out then.”

We got more intertwined in each other’s lives all while trying to compromise and negotiate the appropriate amount of time together. I have a firm quality-over-quantity mentality, while he craved a full-time partner to kiss goodnight and wake up with every morning. I continued to try to find more time for us to be together, and he reluctantly adjusted to not living together or seeing me every day. We coasted this way for a while, but the lack of focus on future plans became more glaring. It became obvious to him that I did have a plan. But it didn’t include a man.

When my son leaves for college in two years, I plan to put some dents in my bucket list: spontaneously travel, do volunteer work, sail the seas, visit friends and family — to be “free” in the sense that I would have no other significant person influencing my decisions.

My boyfriend was exhausted from remaining hopeful that I would want to settle into domestic daily bliss together, and it became clear that scenario might never materialize with me. We found ourselves at a crossroads and ultimately ended it.

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It’s easier to end a relationship when someone’s cheating or betraying you, which has been my experience. But when you’re with someone healthy, loving and emotionally present, more is at stake. Giving up something because the timing is off, coupled with the persistent desire to maintain your original wants and needs, takes courage.

We’re only a couple of months post-breakup, and neither of us regrets the decision. It’s been sad and hard with a zillion reminders of each other. However, there is a spectacular life to live out there and all kinds of ways to do it with or without a partner. I get to decide, not because I need someone but because I want someone. We had to follow our instincts and be true to who we are.

We met up for a final dinner to exchange items and made a future date to circle back and see where our journeys have taken us. Maybe then, the timing will be right.

The author is the co-founder of the Good Things agency (Instagram: @goodthingsteam) and lives in Hollywood.

L.A. Affairs chronicles the search for romantic love in all its glorious expressions in the L.A. area, and we want to hear your true story. We pay $400 for a published essay. Email LAAffairs@latimes.com. You can find submission guidelines here. You can find past columns here.

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'Nickel Boys' challenges us to see in new, striking ways : Pop Culture Happy Hour

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'Nickel Boys' challenges us to see in new, striking ways : Pop Culture Happy Hour

Ethan Herisse in Nickel Boys.

Orion Pictures


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Orion Pictures


Ethan Herisse in Nickel Boys.

Orion Pictures

Adapted from the Pulitzer prize-winner novel from Colson Whitehead, Nickel Boys tells the story of two Black boys who form an unshakeable bond at a segregated reform school in the Jim Crow South. It’s quite ambitious and unlike other prestigious book to film adaptations you’ve probably seen — most of it unfolds in the first-person perspective.

Follow Pop Culture Happy Hour on Letterboxd at letterboxd.com/nprpopculture

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