Red Cherry tomato seeds, heirloom, open-pollinated, non-gmo. 25 seeds per packet.  Red Cherry has fantastic flavor, is red, and fruits in clusters, cool! Very productive. It has performed amazingly well for me in the high desert frontier at 4100 feet. My growing season is sometimes very long (May-November) and other years it can end in early September. No matter, this variety puts on a ton of delicious red cherry tomatoes and does very well regardless of length of season. EXCELLENT flavor, growth, and appearance.

Back in 2010 I bought my first assortment of heirloom seeds, off ebay actually, from Blue Ribbon Tomatoes. Unfortunately, they are no longer selling heirloom tomato seed, boo! Anyway, I bought 100 or so varieties and have been growing them out ever since. One of the tomatoes I've grown, that has been a favorite of mine and my family, and one I continue to grow every year is Red Cherry. 

This is a great choice for people beginning, or who live in short season areas, or for kids! Easy to grow, tough plant withstands heat, wind, you name it and still keeps producing until frost! Stake it up and let it grow!

72 days. Cherry tomatoes, if not the oldest, are then one of the two oldest tomato varieties in cultivation. The 1 oz., dark red fruit are borne in clusters of 6-10. Flesh is dark red and usually very sweet.

This variety of red cherry is a very old heirloom tomato that dates back to 1840. An excellent salad tomato, with clusters of 6-10 on spreading, hardy vines, with dark green foliage. Full-season, high yields of deep scarlet, round, 1 to 1-1/4" diameter, flavorful fruits. Green fruits may be pickled, while ripe ones are used fresh or for preserves. Indeterminate

1966 Burrells' Seed Catalog Says about red cherry tomato..."Attractive, high quality the size of a half dollar.  Extensively used for eating fresh and in salads.  A good home garden variety and is now very popular with Western growers for marketing in berry boxes.  Vigorous plants produce heavily over a long period." 

Cherry tomatoes have some of the most excellent flavor.  Very easy to grow.

INCLUDES BASIC GROWING INSTRUCTIONS

All seeds are fermented, strained, washed, dried, and stored at 34 degrees f until you purchase them. I have been saving seed for 7 years and this is the step by step process I use every year and I'll tell you, my germination rates are amazing! 
 
a quick note on seed storage... I feel through my experience the best way to store your seed is in the refrigerator. Some vegetable varieties produce seed that remains viable for many years (tomatoes) and others produce seed that does not store well under any conditions (onions). I believe seed stored under refrigerated conditions could last 10 years or more. I have just planted some ACE 55 seeds from 2000 this last summer 2017. They did great! Germination rates were in the 90% range and these seeds had been sitting in a box in my garage for the past 17 years! I have some of that seed available now listed as Marlboro Ace 55. GET SOME!

At Frontier Farms, we specialize in many varieties of Heirloom tomatoes, peppers, plus many other vegetable varieties. 

WHAT IS AN HEIRLOOM? Heirloom plants are grown from seeds that have been handed down thru generations, saved from year to year, some varieties dating back hundreds of years. Many made the migration from Europe and the East with the immigrants coming to the USA. The seeds are never cross pollinated  and so they remain true to their particular characteristics. Heirloom tomatoes come in all colors, shapes, and sizes ? Reds, Pinks, Yellows, Orange, White, Green, Striped, and Black. Ranging in sizes of cherry and grape to large grapefruit size, meaty, or juicy.  

WHY HEIRLOOM? These tomatoes are more natural, they are non GMO (genetically modified). They do not have as long of a shelf life as store bought tomatoes, but that is what makes them special. They have a real fantastic tomato flavor not found in grocery store offerings. These tomatoes are indeterminate (they grow all season, they flower all season and they produce tomatoes all season. They don't stop until frost. Once heirloom tomatoes are picked, they do not have a long shelf life as hybrids but they more than make up for any shortcomings in flavor.

Please see my other listings and my store for more great varieties and thank you!