30+ Organic Brandywine Tomato Seeds-Solanum lycopersicum- Open Pollinated Non GMO-A161
30+ Organic Brandywine Tomato Seeds-Solanum lycopersicum- Open Pollinated Non GMO-A161.
Description:
A classic Amish variety from 1895 and still perhaps the best eating tomato ever! Brandywine retains many of the characteristics of the original tomatoes such as deeply lobed potato-like leaves. Purplish-red Beefsteak type fruits average 250-300 g (9-11 oz) in size. The fruit is not considered pretty, but what a taste! The first fruit is ready for harvest approximately 80 days from transplanting outdoors. Indeterminate growth pattern (individual fruits ripen successively over many days). The Brandywine tomato plant is an heirloom cultivar of the species, with large potato-leaved foliage and which bears large pink beefsteak-shaped fruit, popularly considered among the best tasting available.
Scientific name: Solanum lycopersicum 'Brandywine'
Plant height: 9 feet Rank: Cultivar Leaf: Potato leaf Fruit Weight: 24 oz
Shape: Beefsteak
Sow seeds indoors about 6-8 weeks before your last spring frost date – use a soil-less growing mix for germinating and growing seedlings indoors. The temperature of the seeding mix should be 21-24 C (70-75 F) for prompt germination. When the seedlings are 4 cm (1.75″) high, transplant each into individual peat pots, reduce temperature to 15–18 C (59-65 F) and grow on under lights until hardening off and planting in the garden in late May. Transplant into well-drained organic soil 60 cm (24″) apart for determinate varieties and 90 cm (36″) apart for indeterminate varieties.
Tomatoes need warmth, direct sunlight & a steady supply of water. Keep plants well-watered and apply the water to the soil rather than showering down over the plants. Rotate the crop position in the garden every year and wait three years before using the same patch again for tomatoes. A the end of the season dig out and discard diseased plants – do not compost them. It is also very important to keep plants evenly watered as fluctuations in available soil moisture can lead to a host of problems such as fruit cracking or splitting, irregular fruiting and increasing the chance of blossom end rot developing. Apply a mulch of straw around plants to protect them from soil borne diseases and to help conserve soil moisture.