Monday, March 14, 2016

Spring 2016 Seed Selection: Tomatoes

2016 Tomatoes Selected

 photo tomatoes_zpshw9jy2ur.jpgI prefer to grow my tomatoes from seeds for a variety of reasons.  First and foremost I love the variety available to me via on-line seed sources.  Sites such a Adaptive Seeds, Heritage Seeds, Tatiana's and the Seed Savers exchange are great sources for both heirlooms and the unique.  I've found that a pack of well sourced seeds can last for years.  This year I am growing some varieties that were first purchased back in 2008.  My selections this year tend to follow my usual requirements.  They must have excellent taste, be productive in my zone and be generally reported to be reasonably disease resistant on forums such as Tomatoville.  In my zone I lean towards mid-season varieties as the long season varieties tend to leave me with too many greenies on the vine in fall.

I planted these babies on 3/6/2016.  Eight days later all but a few are up.  I expect the older seed to take a little longer.  Here are the varieties I chose for this year and why they made the cut.  The last three on my list I added a couple of days ago.  Because I had room!
  1. Forest Fire:  Early, 60 Days with very good flavor and productivity.                                        
  2. Chocolate Stripes: My seed. Gorgeous, unique neon stripes.  Productive with very good flavor
  3. Striped Roman: Long, meaty productive sauce, pretty colorization.  Productive.  Good flavor
  4. Amazon Chocolate: Mid-season black with very good flavor.  Good Producer. 
  5. Indian Stripe: midseason compact. Purple beefsteak  Excellent producer.  Taste is exquisite.
  6. Porkchop: mid-season yellow with green stripes.  Great flavor. 
  7. African Queen: Late season. Pink Beef steaks 1#.  Very good producer.  Excellent taste
  8. Marizol Bratka: midseason 1# potato leaf, dark pink with outstanding flavor
  9. Sibirskiy Velikan Rozovyi: midseason hearts/beefsteaks, excellent flavor, heavy producer
  10. Eva Purple Ball x Big Beef: Productive disease resistant with good taste.  F3 so not yet stable
  11. Neves x Brandywine: F3.  Disease resistant cross.  Very productive.  Taste Good.  Salad size
  12. Galinas: Sweet fruity highly productive cherry.  Vines get huge.  Early producer.
  13. Darby Red and Yellow:  Early 60 days, red with yellow stripes.  Flavor excellent.
  14. Earls Faux: mid-season 1-1.5# pink beefsteak.  Award winning flavor.  Good production.
  15. Anna Russian: Early oxheart.  Gorgeous.  rich complex flavor.  Very reliable.
  16. Aunt Ginnys Purple: Mid-season vigorous.  Exceptionally flavored pink beefsteaks
  17. Siletz:  Early red slicers.  Productive.  Taste is good for an early
  18. Crnkovic Yugoslavian:  mid-season.  reliable.  large pink sweet beefsteaks, excellent flavor
  19. Black Seaman: Mid-season.  Productive.  Stunning pieces of art when cut.  Delicious.
  20. Hillbilly Potato Leaf: Mid-Season.  Beautiful Bi-color 1# beefsteaks.  Sweet.  Heavy Producer
  21. Black Cherry:  Very tasty cherry when you get good seed.  Many bad seed sources out there.
  22. Seattle's Woolly Blue Mammoth:  Very fuzzy.  Very blue.  Cool looking plant.  productive
  23. Orange Russian 117: Bicolor 8 oz oxhearts. Meaty and very delicious.  Mid-season. 
  24. Black Krim: Very disease resistant in IL.  wonderfully flavored black.



 

2 comments:

Jason said...

Wow, you are going to have a lot of tomatoes! Do you plan to set up a roadside stand? The only variety on your list that I have grown is Black Cherry, and it's a winner.

Anonymous said...

Hi Jason,
No, no roadside stand. Once its tomato season my daughter and I typically just have a bowl of fresh salsa with a little mozzarella and basil for lunch. We go through a lot of tomatoes.

I agree if you get good seed Black Cherry is a winner. Unfortunately there is a lot of "Black Cherry" seed out there that does not remotely resemble the true Black Cherry so I always grow another cherry just in case.

Stacy