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Red Pear, Austin's Tomato

(85 days) Indeterminate. Pre-1861. One of the oldest documented tomatoes. A very prolific cherry-type tomato that is shaped like tiny red pears. Very tasty, they are wonderful for fresh eating straight from the vine and fun in salads.(approx. 15,000 seeds/oz)

Red Zebra Tomato
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(75-80 days) Indeterminate. This is a red version of the popular Green Zebra. The 3-5 oz fruit is bright red with golden yellow striations – absolutely beautiful, and with that sweet-yet-zingy taste that we love so much about Green Zebra. Very productive, this is an excellent tomato for market.

Riesentraube Tomato

SORRY SOLD OUT FOR 2010. (80 days) Indeterminate. Pre-1856. A German heirloom whose name translates as "giant bunches of grapes". This wonderful variety produces clusters of 1" fruits, 20-40 to a cluster. One plant produces hundreds of fruits. Excellent flavour.

Rose de Berne Tomato

(75 days) Indeterminate. Discovered in a market in France, this is actually a Swiss heirloom. Beautiful, 4-8 oz (mid-sized), rose-pink fruits are round and uniform with a rich, robust flavour that consistently wins taste tests. The vines produce quite heavily over a long period of time and have good disease-resistance.

Russian Persimmon Tomato

(80 days)Determinate. A rare Russian heirloom with outstanding flavour - mild and sweet. 3' tall plants bear good-sized, yellow-orange, smooth fruit.

Savignac Tomato

(80 days) Indeterminate. Savignac has performed well for us in cool, wet conditions. A Canadian tomato, it is also known as 'Dufresne' and was given by Raymond Dufresne of Joliette to Frere Armand Savignac in the 1930's. Despite soggy, cool conditions that stunted most of our tomatoes and inhibited fruiting, Savignac was one of the first to fruit and ripen. It produced prodigious amounts of medium-sized, rose-red, round fruits that were juicy and sweet. Perfect for fresh eating or canning.

Scotia Tomato

(60 days)Determinate. Another Canadian-bred tomato that is very popular on the East Coast for making green tomato relish. Very early, it produces heavy yields of mid-sized, red tomatos with a sweet flavour. Good tomato for short seasons, as it is prized for its ability to set fruit in cold weather.

Siberian Tomato
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Determinate. (57-60 days) This very early season tomato is aptly named. Short, determinate vines produce large quantities of 2-3”, egg-shaped, red fruit within as early as 7 weeks of transplanting. A Russian heirloom (of course), it’s popular in Alaska and NWT (of course, again). The fruits are juicy with an excellent flavor. Great for market growers.

Silvery Fir Tree Tomato

(60-70 days)Determinate. A Russian heirloom that is a prolific producer of medium-sized, round red fruit that have a nicely acidic flavour. It gets its name from its unusual foliage - silvery-grey and finely dissected like a carrot-top.

Slava

(65 days) Indeterminate. I am so thrilled to be able to offer this seed again! Slava was one of the first heirloom tomatoes we grew and it started my love affair with heirloom veggies. Then I didn't save seed one year and we were out. I've been searching for it ever since. 'Slava' is an heirloom from the old Czech Republic and its name means "glory" in Czech - and it certainly lives up to its name! It is one of our earliest tomatoes to harvest and it just keeps producing huge yields for most of the summer. The fruit is on the small side of average (2"), red, slightly oblong and very juicy.

Stupice Tomato

NEW FOR 2010!! (60-85 days) Indeterminate. A wonder tomato! Blight resistant, potato-leaved, extremely early producer, good yield and excellent flavour. What more can one want? Won awards in commmunity garden taste-offs. This variety is potato-leaved.

Sweet Pea Red Currant Tomato
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(L. Pimpinellifolium) (75-80 days) Currant tomatoes are a completely separate tomato species from all other garden tomatoes. They produce gazillions of tiny, round little fruits with a nice, sharp taste. This variety has bright red fruits that liven up a salad (if you don’t eat them all before you get back to the house!). Currant tomatoes will easily cross with each other, so if you want to save seed, grow no more than one variety.

Tartar from Mongolstan Tomato

NEW FOR 2010!! 70 days. Indeterminate. Not much is known of this variety's ancestry, but it is definitely worth growing. Able to tolerate both hot, humid or cool, wet growing conditions, it produces a generous supply of medium-sized, orange-red tomatoes that are juicy and well-flavoured. A good one for the less-than-favourable growing conditions we've had recently.

Tigerella Tomato

(55-65 days) Indeterminate. Aka "Mr. Stripey". An old English greenhouse variety, this delightful tomato ripens early and keeps producing over a long period. The 4-6 oz. fruits are a picturesque red with orange stripes and have a bit of a tangy flavor. Disease-resistant.

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