Texas Wild Cherry Tomato Seeds

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Texas Wild Cherry Tomato Seeds

$4.00

Yeehaw—ring the cow bell, supper is ready. Call us anything but late for dinner and Olive Garden please have my salad ready for these prolific yielding beautifully red 1/2” diameter clustered cherry Texas rangers. Folklore says they originated from a wild tomato patch in southern Texas and the puggle believes everything she reads and we believe in everything we see. Drought hardy and requires less attention than most tomatoes, it provides a sweet and tart combination perfect for snacking on those long dusty trails on the range. I’ll tell you what, sure does put on a lot of fruit.

 - Plant 2 seeds 1/8 deep in soft soil in at least 3” deep container—we like to start everything indoors about a month before last frost: almanac.com/gardening/frostdates for your local date                                                                                                         — Plant in area with full sun/strongest light in warmest area. Water it in and spray/flick additional water each day—make sure it’s not too damp though, we highly suggest investing in a heating mat faster germination and healthy roots. Germinates in 12-14 days                                                                                              -  Plant outside when at least 4 inches tall, after danger of last frost—make sure not to start too early as it will get leggy unless under supplemental light or area with strong lighting.                     - Mix in bat guano/organic nutrients into the hole you are planting in. Plant at least 2.5 ft apart, as an indeterminate plant—will need to be trellised and apply organic nutrients throughout growing cycle.                                                                                                             -Make sure roots are not saturated in water, when it doubt let it dry out. They are forgiving plants! Plant early flowers to generate more vegetative growth— and prune extra suckers often for more fruit. Ready to munch on 65 days from transplanting, or 90 days from direct seeding. Make sure to harvest often to encourage more fruit production. Minimum 25 seeds.

 

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