Yellow Cherry Tomato Seeds

  • Enjoy Yellow cherry tomatoes as a gorgeous complement to fresh salads. They are very ornamental & go through lovely lime green to bright yellow colors when mature.
  • Excellent for snacking on fresh, adding to your salad or veggie trays.
  • It gave a high yield of small, golden-yellow, round-shaped cherry fruit, which is juicy and super crunchy.
  • These delicious golden beauties are indeterminate plants that have strong vines that produce high yields of fruit, throughout the season.

Packet contains 20+ seeds

90.00

Yellow Cherry Tomato Seeds

Product Description:

A fantastic Golden Yellow cherry tomato producing heavy yields of 1″  mild sweet and citrusy notes flavourful fruits. It is vigorous and productive, yielding firm, crack-resistant fruits perfect for growing in containers and outdoors too. They have rich, creamy, and rich and is perfect for salads and fresh snacking.
This cute little tomato will grow 10-15 fruit per branch and is an indeterminate tomato so be ready for high yield.

NOTE: Don’t miss out on the rare treat!

Quick Facts:

  • Botanical Name: Solanum Lycopersicum
  • Common name: Yellow cherry tomato
  • Variety:  Indeterminate
  • Fruit color: Yellow
  • Life Cycle: Annual
  • Bloom Time: Summers, Monsoon
  • Taste: Mild Sweet & Sour
  • Germination Rate: 80%
  • Days to Maturity:  60-75 days
  • Difficulty level: Easy

Yellow Cherry Tomato Care:

  • Sunlight Requirement: Tomatoes require a minimum of 6 hours of sun per day during the growing season.
  • Sowing: Seeds are sown at a depth of 2-3 cm and covered with a fine layer of soil, and transplanting when the plants develop their first true leaves before they become root bound, they should be transplanted into larger into large containers and keep planting distance 50-70 cm if grown in the outside garden.
  • Soil: Humus-rich soils, preferably mixed in before planting, and never use garden soil, which often drains poorly.
  • Watering:  Regular watering during summer but without wetting the leaves to avoid diseases.
  • Fertilizer: Feed with a liquid tomato fertilizer (high in potash) starting when the first fruits start to form and repeat it after every two or three weeks and use nitrogen in order to help the plant support its foliage.
  • Use cage: Vines are quite vigorous, so use a cage, and save your garden space.
  • Good intercropping partners: Basil, lettuce, marigold, mint, onion, parsley, carrots, onion, chive, garlic, and celery.