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Tomato Cherry Pink Grape

Tomato Cherry Pink Grape

 (2674 Reviews)
Regular price $9.99
Regular price $9.99 Sale price $19.99
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🔥 Over 95.6% chose 200 Seeds 13,195 Live Viewing
 
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Tomato Cherry Pink Grape

Tomato Cherry Pink Grape

Regular price $9.99
Regular price $9.99 Sale price $19.99
SAVE 50% Sold out
Seed Count: 100/200
Tomato Cherry Pink Grape

An extremely productive cherry sized variety producing oval pink tinged / Red grape shaped fruits in large trusses. Fruits are very sweet and average 12-16 Gram in weight. Indeterminate.

Cultivation Advice Tomato Cherry Pink Grape

Sow in spring under glass or on a windowsill 1/16 inch deep.
Germination takes around 6-14 days at 65-75F.
Transplant the seedlings when large enough to handle into 3 inch pots.
Grow on under cooler conditions and when about 8 inches tall,
either plant in their growing position in the greenhouse
or gradually acclimatise them to outdoor conditions
and plant out 18 inches apart in a warm and sunny spot in moist,
fertile well drained soil and keep watered.

STARTING SEEDLINGS
Start indoors about 8 weeks before outdoor night temperatures are reliably in the 55° (13°C) range. Sow seeds 1/4 inch deep and 1 inch apart in a container of seed starting mix. Keep moist but not soggy and very warm, 75°F (24°C). Provide a strong light source until seedlings are ready to plant outside. When they are 2 inches tall, transplant into 4 inch pots, burying stems up to base of leaves. Maintain around 70°F (21°C). Feed with half-strength fertilizer every 2 weeks until weather is warm enough to gradually acclimate seedlings to outdoor conditions. Transplant these vigorous indeterminate climbers 3 feet apart into rich soil in full sun.

HARVEST AND USE
Pick fruits when fully colored for best flavor. Enjoy for sweet snacks right out of the garden, in salads or stuffed with herbed cream cheese.

GROWING NOTES
Prepare soil well with aged manure or compost. Plant tomatoes several inches deeper than they were growing in pots. Provide strong stakes or tall wire cages at planting time as plants grow tall with heavy fruit loads. Mulch to provide the even moisture that prevents cracking. Don’t overwater once fruit begins to ripen.

Soil temperature: 75 - 80 degrees fahrenheit
Seeding depth: 0.25 - 0.5 inches
Germination days: 6 - 14 days
Grow on temperature day: 60 - 65 degrees fahrenheit
Weeks indoor: 5 - 6 weeks
Maturation days: 65 days

 

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Beginner's Gardening Guide

The three most essential elements for seed germination are:
Water: Allows the seed to absorb moisture, activates enzymes, and breaks dormancy
Suitable temperature: A suitable temperature is necessary to initiate growth
Oxygen: Respiration requires oxygen, which provides energy.
Some plants may also have light requirements, but the first three are essential.

⭐The Before You Sow Checklist

Preparation makes all the difference. Get these basics sorted before you sow, and you'll avoid most common pitfalls.

Don’t use garden soil in containers—it compacts when wet, contains weeds, pests and diseases. Choose seed-sowing or quality multipurpose compost instead.We suggest a fine, free-draining, low-nutrient peat-free medium (young seedlings don’t need feeding).

For outdoor sowing, loosen soil to a fine tilth, rake level, and water the day before if dry.

💡How to Sow Seeds Indoors

Indoor sowing lets you start earlier and control conditions easily. Fill containers with compost, level it gently without compacting, then water well and drain.

Sow 2–3 seeds per cell or scatter thinly in trays as directed. Cover lightly with compost/vermiculite (or leave uncovered if light is needed). Label with plant name and sowing date.

Ideal for crops sensitive to root disturbance, such as carrots, parsnips, peas and beans. Prepare fine soil, make shallow drills, sow thinly, cover lightly and water gently. Thin seedlings when they develop true leaves.

📢How to Sow Seeds Outdoors

Ideal for crops sensitive to root disturbance, such as carrots, parsnips, peas and beans. Prepare fine soil, make shallow drills, sow thinly, cover lightly and water gently. Thin seedlings when they develop true leaves.

Pricking Out🌱

When seedlings have true leaves, transplant them into larger pots to avoid overcrowding.Fill pots with fresh compost, make a hole, and water seedlings first for easier lifting.

Lift them gently by the leaves (not stems) and firm compost around roots.Bury leggy seedlings (e.g., tomatoes) up to their lowest leaves.Water lightly and keep out of direct sun for a few days.

Common Problems

Seeds won't germinate: This could be due to using old seeds, incorrect temperature, sowing too deeply, or the compost drying out.
Leggy seedlings: This is a result of insufficient light. Move to a brighter spot, use grow lights or try planting deeper when transplanting.

🍃Hardening Off & Planting Out

Indoor-grown plants need hardening off to adapt outdoors.Place them outside in a sheltered spot by day for a week, bring in at night, then gradually leave them out overnight over another week.
Plant on a mild, cloudy day. Dig holes bigger than root balls, firm gently, water well. Protect from slugs and frost with fleece.
For continuous harvests, try succession sowing: sow small batches of quick-growing crops every 2–3 weeks.

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