Mother Earth Gardener

The Big Idea Behind Dwarf Tomatoes

IN 2005, THE DWARF TOMATO PROJECT was catalyzed by a long-distance friendship, curiosity, a gaping need, and an idea from an old seed catalog. Now, 90 newly created, stable, open-pollinated tomatoes are available from an ever-increasing array of forward-thinking seed companies, and the Dwarf Tomato Project — representing hundreds of volunteer gardeners the world over — can take a deep breath and be satisfied with its accomplishments.

DEFINING A DWARF TOMATO

Prior to 2010, when the first cultivars from our project were released, dwarf tomatoes were the most obscure members of the tomato family. Representing a third major growth habit, they combine the most useful qualities of their better-known relatives: indeterminate and determinate types. It’s important to realize that the term “dwarf” describes the relative height of the mature plant, not the size of the tomatoes on the plants.

are the unruly characters in the tomato world that grow up and out (if unpruned), requiring a strategy of caging and staking to keep them under control. The vast majority of tomatoes are indeterminate in growth habit, and virtually all of the popular, colorful, flavorful heirlooms reside in this category. The main

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Mother Earth Gardener

Mother Earth Gardener5 min read
SWEET (and Simple) Potatoes
MORE TIMES THAN I’D LIKE to admit, a sweet potato has remained hidden in my vegetable cupboard long enough to begin sprouting. For years, I’d either cook it before it spoiled or I’d toss it into the compost pile. After I’d started a flock of chickens
Mother Earth Gardener1 min read
Straw Vs. Hay
Think of a drinking straw — hollow and rigid. Straw bales are tightly packed bundles of just such “straws” of dried hollow stems. Hay bales, on the other hand, are made up of bundled grasses. The most commonly used and widely available types of straw
Mother Earth Gardener3 min read
Build a Sunny Addition to Your Garden
YOU MAY ALREADY HAVE a fairly robust and critter-proof gate for your garden fence. That’s great for protecting the garden, but utility gates aren’t necessarily decorative. Happily, you can add an accent gate inside the garden that’s a little more att

Related