🍅REISETOMATE TOMATOES🍅 x 15+ seeds
🍅REISETOMATE TOMATOES🍅 x 15+ seeds
🍅REISETOMATE TOMATOES🍅 x 15+ seeds

🍅REISETOMATE TOMATOES🍅 x 15+ seeds

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Reisetomate tomatoes look like a bunch of bright red cherry tomatoes fused together. Each lump on the fruit is its own tomato, complete with core and seed pockets, which can be easily torn apart from the cluster without a knife. These thick-skinned tomatoes are juicy and highly acidic, and they offer a sweet yet sharp tomato flavor. The vigorous Reisetomate tomato plants grow upwards of 1.5 meters, and the clusters of fruit average 15 centimeters in length, with each individual tomato weighing approximately 2 to 4 ounces.

Seasons/Availability

Reisetomate tomatoes are available mid-summer into early fall.

Current Facts

Reisetomate tomatoes are members of the Solanaceae, or nightshade, family, along with the potato, eggplant and tobacco. They are also commonly known as the Traveller’s tomato, and they are an extremely rare cultivar. Tomatoes were originally termed Solanum lycopersicum by Carl Linnaeus, but this designation was then changed to Lycopersicon esculentum, the term Lycopersicon deriving from the Greek word meaning “wolf peach,” and esculentum simply meaning edible. However, modern studies and DNA evidence are encouraging a return to the original classification.

Sowing Tomatoes

Sow seeds or plant seedlings in Summer. January is an excellent time to grow tomatoes – sow in succession and enjoy a harvest through-out summer.
The only problem with choosing which variety of tomato to sow is choice! Do you go for the big, fleshy ones; so good on your favourite burger? Or a smaller, bushy cherry tomato for salads and snacks? Oh, but what about the irresistible Roma for your favourite pasta sauce?! And surely you should consider one of the very trendy heirloom varieties – perhaps a black one? The choice is yours and our advice is to choose what you know you will use and what is suitable to the space you have. Happy hunting!
Another important consideration when choosing tomatoes is the growth habit. Tomatoes either have a determinate or indeterminate growth:

Indeterminate tomatoes

have a vining habit that continue growing throughout the growing season and can become very tall,

start forming fruit later in the season, but fruit will ripen steadily and continuously through the season until the first frost and

need taller, sturdier supports and stakes.

Determinate tomatoes

have a bushier habit and will grow to a fixed mature size,

start forming fruit earlier in the season and all fruit ripens within about a 2 week period, after which the plant will die off and

need support in the form of lower stakes or cages. These are good to grow in confined spaces and containers. For tips on Balcony gardening click |HERE|

Tomato seeds can be sown 6 – 8 weeks before the last average frost date (in Gauteng that is the 27th of August), provided they are kept in a warm space indoors or in a hothouse. When they are big enough, and all danger of frost has passed, they should be hardened off for at least a week before transplanting them into beds or containers.

Planting Tomato Seedlings

Choose a site that receives at least 6 hours of full sun per day – with our hot summers morning sun is preferable to the very hot afternoon sun.
Good soil preparation is key! Prepare in advance for planting by mixing a generous layer amount of compost and earthworm castings and organic 2:3:2 fertiliser into your soil or potting soil. Also add a dash of dolomitic lime as this will make more calcium available to the plant; important in the prevention of blossom end rot.
Good drainage in beds and pots is very important.
Transplant your seedlings when they have at least 4 true leaves and have been hardened off.
Choose the type of support you would like to use and install prior to planting to avoid damage to the young seedlings.
Plant your seedlings on a cloudy day or early in the morning when it is still cool. Water the seedlings 15 minutes before planting and carefully remove from the cavity, keeping the soil around the roots intact.
Plant seedling 60cm apart and, if planting in rows, allow 1m between rows. Tomato seedling should be planted a little deeper than they were in the trays. Pinch off a few of the weaker, lower shoots and plant to a depth of just below the first leaves. This ensures strong root development.
Water well along the root zone after planting. Avoid watering tomato plants directly on their leaves.
R 35,00