70 - 76 days - Indeterminate vines
This small fruited, heirloom variety dates back to the late 1800's!
The skin and flesh are a beautiful, rich yellow, and resemble a large grape! The fruit are 30mm long and grow in bunches.
Great in salads, preserves, pickling, or just eating fresh from the garden!
They tend to last long into the season and are often happily fruiting long after the others have returned to the compost bin.
We have had the best results on a trellis rather than staked as they do like to wander

This is a great variety to grow. in that it begins to fruit early and continues for ages.
Very disease and pest resistant, it can get to 2 m high and 1.5 m spread, with braces of fruit at every opportunity.
The fruit is larger than a cherry tomato with an ox heart shape and a lovely mild taste that is good fresh, but preserves well also.
We cannot go a season without planting it.
It will do well in a container as long as it is well fed and watered.

55-60- days – Indeterminate vines.
Growing on a vigorous vine, that can keep climbing for several metres are bunches of bright orange cocktail tomatoes that are larger than a cherry tomato
Thin-skinned, this plump tight tomato is juicy, sweet, rich in flavour with practically no tang at all.
Easier to pick than a regular Cherry Tomato, they are still bite sized and convenient on the plate or in the salad.
Quick to fruit, they are often the first of the season, even if planted late.

70 - 76 days - Indeterminate vines
This small fruited, heirloom variety dates back to the late 1800's!
The skin and flesh are a beautiful, dense red, and resemble a very large grape! The fruit are 30 -40 mm long and grow in long bunches. Slightly larger than Yellow Pear.
Great in salads, preserves, pickling, or just eating fresh from the garden!
They tend to be early into the season and continue fruiting until the the very end.
We have had the best results on a trellis rather than staked as they do like to wander.

55-60- days – Indeterminate vines.
These are very quick growers with a season range that is second to none.
Bright red tomatoes that vary in size to almost ping pong ball proportions.
Almost any time of year will do and if you plant them in a pot with some winter protection, you can use them all year round.
Thin skinned, sweet and prolific, they produce vines that can grow to three metres with generous bunches being borne before you have picked the last lot..