Tomatoes
TOMATOES
Beefmaster (Ind. **)
80 days. Large 2 lb deep red, meaty fruit. Tolerant of cracking and splitting. Should be staked.

Better Boy (Ind. **)
70 days. Resistant to vericillium, fusarium and nematodes. Produces fruit in the 1 lb. range all season. Large leaves for
sun scald protection. Crack free.

Big Beef (Ind. **)
73 days. Extra large, juicy, red 10-12 oz fruit are borne high on the vines right up to frost. Very heavy yields. Disease
resistant. AAS winner.

Black Krim
75 days.  Heirloom variety.  Dark red-purple fruit.  Very juicy.  Indeterminate.

Burpee Big Boy (Ind. **)
78 days. Large fruit up to 2 lbs. Vigorous grower, heavy foliage.

Brandywine (Ind. **)
88 days. An heirloom variety of the Beefsteak type. Very large fruits on unusually upright, potato-leaved plants. The color
is a pink-red caused by pigmentless skin over red flesh. The fruits set sparsely, only 1-2 per cluster, ripen late. But at
seasons end, this tomato's qualities shine. Many claim this to be the best-tasting tomato variety of all.

Bush Early Girl (Ind.**)
54 days. 6 1/2 to 7 1/2 oz fruit on a high-yielding, space-saving plant. Can be grown as a bush or on short stakes or in
cages.

Celebrity (Determ *)
70 days. AAS winner. Large 7 oz glossy fruit. No staking. Fruits are firm, meaty, with FEW SEEDS. Produces under a
broad range of conditions.

Champion (Ind. **)
62 days. Resistant to vericillium, fusarium, nematodes and tobacco mosaic. 10 oz fruit has solid meaty slices. Replaces
Bonny Best, Glamour and Super Sioux.

Early Girl (Ind**)
45-50 days.  6 oz. fruit Deep red with globe shape.  Mild flavor with red meaty interior.  Sturdy plants with large leaves
for sun scold protection.

Golden Girl (Determ*)
69 days.  Smooth golden Yellow 7-8 oz. fruit has a very mild sweet flavor.

Golden Honey Bunch
60 days.  High Yield on Golden clusters.  Vigorous Vines.  Indeterminate.        

Heartland (Semi-Ind.**)
68 days. Dwarf, compact plants ideal for small-space gardening. Good flavor and performance. Best staked. Semi-
indeterminate.

Juliet
60 days. AAS winner. Sweet-flavored, red attractive glossy-skinned fruits producing high-quality tomatoes in clusters like
grapes on a vine. Holds on vine with less cracking.

La Roma (Roma Hybrid)
62 days. Italian type tomato. Heavy yields of 3 oz. to 4 oz. plum-shaped fruit. Excellent for canning whole, catsup, tomato
paste, chile sauce or adding body to tomato juice. VERY FEW SEEDS. Firm, meaty texture.

Lemon Boy
72 days.  The first real true yellow variety, not golden.  A heavy producer of 7-8 oz. fruit that are very tasty and mild.  
Indeterminate habit.

Patio (Determ*)
70 days. Medium-sized deep oblate-shaped fruit with good color. Has a compact upright habit with dark crinkled foliage.
Grows 24”-30” tall. Stake.

Sugary Grape (Determ*)
85 days. AAS Winner. Produces ½ oz. oval shaped fruit.

Superfantastic (Ind. **)
70 days. Smooth, deep globe fruit of large size. Very productive. Strong VF tolerant plants.

Sweet 100
65 days. Hundreds of sweet 1” fruit in clusters of long branches.

Tumbling Tom
63-70 days.  Cascading variety is great for baskets and container use.  Produces high yields of sweet 1-2" cherry
tomatoes on a very well branched plant.  Cascades 18" in baskets.

Washington Cherry
60 days.  Plant produces high yields of 1 1/4" red cherry tomatoes.  These tomatoes are very flavorful and meaty.  Good
storage tomato.  Suitable for home garden and market growers.  Developed by the Washington State University.  
Determinate.

Yellow Pear
70 days. 2” Yellow, pear-shaped fruit used for salads, canning or relish.

Ground Cherry (Yellow Husk Cherry)
70 days.  Not a true tomato.  Plants grow 1 1/2' to 2 1/2' tall bearing 1/2" to 3/4" fruit enclosed within a lantern shaped,
paper-like husk.  When ripe, fruit is yellow and husks turn light brown.  Ground cherries have a sweet tart flavor and can
be eaten fresh or cooked in desserts, pies, preserves or sauces.

*Determinate types of tomatoes
End of each stem produces a flower cluster that stops growth in that direction. Lateral branches develop that eventually
terminate in a flowery cluster. Plants are smaller, more bushy and generally not desirable for staking.

**Indeterminate
Flower clusters are produced between nodes and the growing point continues indefinitely. Well adapted for staking.  Fruit
are produce all growing season.
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