Beams Yellow Pear Tomato (15 Fresh Seeds Grown in 21/22 Growing season):
This tomato is pre-1800 and is very much popular
today. Clusters of pear-shaped, yellow fruits with mild, delicious flavour are
attractive and tasty whole for salads, fresh eating. You will be amazed at how
many delicious fruits that yellow pear produces. These miniature pear-shaped
tomatoes are 1-3/4 to 2 inches long and yellow in colour. They are delightfully
sweet, considered by many as 'garden candy'. A very tasty pear-shaped yellow
tomato. These are just like the little yellow pear tomatoes that your
Grandmother grew. As rich in vitamins as it is flavourful, a very popular
variety for the home garden. Growth is fairly tall will need staking or caging.
Indeterminate 75 days.
***Grown
In the West Tamar in Tasmania using Organic (non-certified)/Permaculture
principles focusing on soil health!
INFO:
CULINARY
USE: Fresh Eating
FLAVOR
PROFILE: Sweet/Fruity
DESCRIPTION:
Prolific grower
FRUIT
COLOR: Yellow
FRUIT
SHAPE: Small pear/piriform
MATURITY:
75 Days
PLANT
TYPE: Determinate/ Semi-Determinate
BREED:
Heirloom/ Open Pollinated
SEEDS:
15
SPECIES: Solanum Lycopersicum
Tomato Growing
Instructions:
1. Select
Your Preferred Tomato Seed
It's
fairly easy and inexpensive to start many tomato varieties from seed, so
experiment with the types you like best. Here are some factors to take into
consideration:
o Look
for organic seed if you prefer organic produce.
o If
you know your area is prone to a particular disease, choose a hardy tomato
variety.
o If
you want your tomatoes all at once to preserve them, look at determinate
varieties. Indeterminate types bear fruit over a longer period, with some
starting later in the season than others.
o Note
the mature size of the plant. In general, determinate plants tend to be smaller
than indeterminate ones
o Which
size of tomato do you want and/or what use? Cherry sizes are small
for salads or beefsteak are large for slicing
o Flavor
Profile, some are sweet, and some are tart. Consider what you want
to use the tomato for: saucing, slicers, salads, relish, decorative/colourful
o
2. Prepare
the Containers for Planting
It's
often more efficient to dampen the potting mix before you put it in the
containers. Add some water and work it through the soil. Keep adding water
until the mix stays compressed in your hand but is not dripping wet. It should break
apart when you poke it with your finger.
Then,
fill your containers with potting soil. Gently firm the soil, so it's about 1cm
from the top.
3. Plant
the Tomato Seeds
Make
a 1/2cm furrow in the potting mix. Then, sprinkle two to three seeds into the
furrow, and cover them with a sprinkling of potting mix. Gently pat down the
mix, so the seeds make good contact with the soil. You can spray the surface
with water if it doesn’t feel moist.
At
this point, place your containers somewhere warm. Check them daily to make sure
the soil is moist—but not wet—and watch for germination. Tomato seed
germination typically occurs in about five to 10 days
4. Care
for the Tomato Seedlings
Keep
your tomato seedlings warm and moist and provide them with light—preferably
grow lights. Rotate the plants if they seem to be leaning in one direction.
Once your tomato seedlings have true leaves, it's time to start feeding them.
Any good liquid fertilizer can be used once a week but dilute it to half the
label's recommended dose.
Tomato
stems grow sturdier if they are tossed about by the wind. You can simulate this
indoors by putting a fan on your plants for an hour a day or by gently running
your hand through them each time you pass.
5. Pot
the Tomato Seedlings
When
the seedlings are 2 to 3 inches tall and have a couple sets of true leaves,
it's time to pot them in larger containers. In general, 7.5cm-10cm containers
are a good size, though you might have to move them to larger pots
later if you can't plant them outdoors.
Fill
the new pots with moist potting mix just as you did when you started the seeds.
If more than one seed germinated in the same container, you will need to thin
the seedlings. Either gently jiggle entangled roots apart, or simply snip off
unwanted seedlings at soil level. This ensures that you won't damage the
seedling you want to keep.
Plant
each tomato seedling in its new pot a little deeper than it was in its original
container. If it's tall and leggy, you can plant it right up to its top-most
leaves. Then, firm the soil gently around the seedling.
6. Transplant
the Seedlings Outdoors
When
you're finally ready to plant your tomatoes in the garden, choose a cool or
overcast day. Once again, plant them deeper than they were in their pots, so
new roots will form along the buried stem.
You
can plant them all the way up to the top couple sets of leaves. This is
especially ideal if your plants have gotten too tall indoors, and you want them
to become stockier and stronger. If you can’t dig deep enough, you can always
plant them sideways in a furrow. The top of the plant will find the sun and
grow upright in a few days.
Packaging: All our seeds are sent in small zip lock bags to make postage more economical. They have a sticker label with basic germination instructions and are posted in a padded bubble mailer to protect seeds.
Please note for international
Purchasers -
It is the buyer’s
responsibility to know whether these seeds are allowed into your country as no
refunds or re-sends will be given on seeds that do not arrive. By
agreeing to purchase these seeds you accept the risk involved in the chance
they may be taken by your countries biosecurity if not permitted as i cannot
know the regulations of every country. Thank you for your understanding.
I Currently offer a rate for a tracked parcel. (unfortunately, this is
expensive from Australia but can be beneficial by ordering a larger quantity of
seeds) Please understand that by offering tracked parcel and by the buyer
reading this disclaimer, any requests for refund or resend will be denied by
ebay. So, it is very important you contact your local authorities to make sure
these seeds are allowed or if you need an import permit.