Plentiful
Showing all 7 results
-
Coorong Pink
Coorong Pink is an early-season regular leaf dwarf with heavy yields of small to medium 5 – 8oz smooth mostly round pink fruit. Plants reach around a metre+ / 4 ft by end of season and become very heavy with fruit requiring strong support. Photo by Patrina.
-
Dwarf Mahogany
Dwarf Mahogany is a mid-season regular leaf dwarf with heavy yields of mahogany brown medium-large oblate fruit in the 8-10 oz range, rich and tasty. Plants have sturdy stems, robust rugose foliage, and reach approximately a metre/ 3 ft tall requiring support due to the weight of tomatoes. Photo by Tatiana Kouchnareva.
-
Kookaburra Cackle
Kookaburra Cackle is a mid-season rugose regular leaf dwarf with prolific small 3 – 5oz brown mostly round fruit with rich purplish red interiors. It is named after an iconic Australian bird that is a brown and beige king-fisher type with a call that sounds like a human laughing heartily! Plants reach around a metre+ / 3-4 ft by end of season. Photo by Patrina.
-
Maralinga
Maralinga is a mid-season rugose regular leaf dwarf that produces prolific medium-large 6 – 10oz oblate rich brown tomatoes with meaty purple-red interiors. Maralinga is a region in the arid north of South Australia where atom bomb tests carried out for the British in the 1950s displaced the local indigenous population and ruined their land with radiation fallout. Photo by Patrina.
-
Sturt Desert Pea
Sturt Desert Pea is a mid-season regular leaf dwarf that produces abundant yields of 4-8oz tasty oblate shiny red fruit. Plants reach around a metre+ / 3-4 ft by end of season. Photo by Patrina.
-
Tanunda Red
Tanunda Red is a mid-season rugose regular leaf dwarf with prolific medium-large 6 – 10 oz oblate rich red tomatoes. Plants reach around a metre+ / 3-4 ft by end of season. Photo by Patrina.
-
Waratah
Waratah is a mid-season rugose regular leaf dwarf with prolific medium to large 6 – 12oz oblate red densely fleshed tasty fruit. Plants reach around a metre+ / 3-4 ft by end of season and need staking to support the weight of fruit. Photo by Patrina.