susceptible to bacterial speck or spot (don’t know which one it got)
Notes:
Seeds of Change: “Salad tomato from an old British seed company”
Sources: (where to buy)
Seeds of Change
Results from My Garden:
2009: New addition from Seeds of Change in my 2009 garden: proved to be a bit too small for my tastes. Good flavor, though. Prone to cracking & spots. Produced quite a lot of fruit
2010: No cracking this year! I think they were just getting too much water last year. They are a reliable producer – every day there are 5-10 ready to eat. As an appetizer, they were the guests’ favorite little tomato! Fusarium made its appearance this year; one or both of the Yellow Perfection plants got it
2012: Both died by early July; planted extra one in mid-July, but it was probably too late in the season to put out
2013: started 2 plants from seed; planted them both, but one was hit hard with curly top virus in early July, so I yanked it. The one survivor was a very poor producer – found out it had root-knot nematodes when I yanked it at the end of the season; it also had a wilt
2014 grafting attempt: two attempts failed. The first attempt failed because the scion popped right off the rootstock (too much water pressure from rootstock?). The second attempt failed due to wilt then rot at the graft (too warm? non-sterile cut?)
SEASON
SOURCE
DATES
SPACING
PLANTS
MATURITY
YIELD PER PLANT
AVG SIZE
DISEASE
2009
SoC seeds
3/5 > 4/23 > 5/7
12×18″
2
no records kept, but they were smaller than seed packet states