Viewing comments posted by TomatoNut95

7 found:

[ Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum 'Dwarf Suzy’s Beauty') | Posted on June 30, 2023 ]

Worked with this one in 2023. Potato top, dwarf plants bear yellow/red fruits that are meaty in texture and sweet in taste. Harvested a fruit weighing. 10.8 oz. Nice variety, in my opinion.

[ Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum 'Dwarf Goldfinch') | Posted on June 29, 2023 ]

Goldfinch has lovely, potato top foliage on a 2 foot plant. Fruits can range from small to medium sized and are a canary yellow color. Interior meaty with a sweet flavor. Very fine variety and I recommend it to anyone who likes yellow tomatoes. 👍

[ Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum 'Dwarf Hannah's Prize') | Posted on June 28, 2023 ]

I worked with this variety in 2023. Plants, while they stayed around 2 feet in height, got very top heavy and kept falling over like crazy even with the aid of stakes. Rot was a severe issue and many fruits went to waste. However I finally got to taste a large, 11 oz fruit and found the taste quite satisfying. The interior was meaty yet very seedy.

[ Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum 'Wherokowhai') | Posted on June 22, 2023 ]

Grew this lovely dwarf and was quite pleased. 3' or less tall plants bore a good cluster of small to medium sized fruit which matured to a yellow color with blushed bottom. Meaty interior with a wonderful sweet and tart flavor.

[ Petunia 'Greetings from Jaromere' | Posted on April 11, 2023 ]

While this is a very beautiful petunia that wasn't difficult to grow, it isn't an accurate variety. Some blooms will be single and non-ruffled while others will be ruffled but not double. I have yet to see any blossoms resembling the Baker Creek photos. However, it is still a lovely bi-colored selection if you're a petunia fan.

[ Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum 'Velvet Red') | Posted on April 3, 2023 ]

Red Velvet Cherry is a lovely plant! A novelty whose unique foliage is soft and fuzzy to the touch. Color of leaves is a grey/blue hue. Red fruits are also slightly fuzzy themselves.
However, because this variety is still unstable, you can get a non-fuzzy "sport" plant. To maintain this variety's characteristics, it's best to not save seed from the non-fuzzy.

[ Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum 'Heinz Classic Processor') | Posted on January 2, 2023 ]

As plant grows, it has the unique growth habit of lowering its branches. These are very fragile plants that break so easily and are best protected from strong winds.

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