SavinaRed said:I ordered some dwarf species of tomatoes for next season. I'll have to look through my emails to find the source. This will be my first season growing them.
Here is where I ordered my seeds
http://www.victoryseeds.com/dwarf-tomato-project.html
I'm going to grow some in ground and in containers and see which way is best in my garden. I like having the option to move them from the 100* plus weather in containers.solid7 said:
Yeah, that's a great seed source. I ordered all of my dwarf seeds the first season that I grew them from the the dwarf tomato project.
I think you'll be pleased, especially if you're relegated to container growing.
SavinaRed said:I'm going to grow some in ground and in containers and see which way is best in my garden. I like having the option to move them from the 100* plus weather in containers.
wiriwiri said:Semillas has some of those micro tomatoes ..& there is a tomato forum,aw shucks I don't recall the name just now ,maybe someone here might know it?
I just put out the next crop of Super Sweet 100. They are incredible producers, often clustering into strings of 30 or more tomatoes!NinjaR said:A few weeks ago, I read about "Matt's Wild Cherry Tomatoes" which are supposed to be jellybean size or a little larger and are supposed to produce quite a bit. I got a hold of some seeds and will be sowing them in a couple of weeks. Never planted any small tomato version other than Super Sweet 100s. We'll see how they hold up and produce.
Actually, "dwarf" and "micro" refer to the size of the plant, not the fruit.bpiela said:I will be growing these soon. Would these be considered micro?
http://www.tradewindsfruit.com/spoon-tomato-seeds