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Tomato Plants Looking for a Home! |
Here is a list of plants & varieties. Pricing is as follows
4 Packs (Tomato & Peppers) = $1.50
Flat Price = $12 (48 Plants, can mix different varieties & Peppers)
Herbs (4" Round Pots) = $1.50
Cucumbers & Squash (Sold in Bundles)
5 = $1.00
10=$1.50
25=$2.25
Tomato | Peppers | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Big Boy | Sweet Banana | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Brandywine Pink | Better Belle | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Beefsteak | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Bloody Butcher | Herbs | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Marglobe | Cilantro | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Oxheart | Dill | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Oregon Spring | Thyme | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Roma | Parsley | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Better Boy | Sweet Basil | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Cluj Yellow Cherry | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Big Boy | Cucumbers | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Mt. Fresh | Pickling | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Rutgers | Straight Eight | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Grape | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Mortgage Lifter | Squash | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Mr. Stripey | Zuchnni | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Gardners Delight | Yellow Squash | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Florida Pink | Butternut | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Beefsteak | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Cherokee Purple | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Celebrity | |||||||||||||||||||||||
San Marzano | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Brandywine Red |
Like your site. Beautiful plants. Wish I could come and buy tomatoes-Bloody Butcher, Mortgage lifter and Mr. Stripey sound interesting
ReplyDeleteHere is the origin of the Mortgage Lifter. This is part of the reason why I like the old Heirlooms, they have such great stories to tell.
DeleteThe Mortgage Lifter tomato was developed in the early 1930's in Logan, West Virginia by a radiator repairman, M.C. "Radiator Charlie" Byles. Without any experience in breeding, he made a successful cross of four of the largest tomatoes he could find - German Johnson, Beefsteak, an Italian variety, and an English variety. Radiator Charlie sold the first seedlings of his new tomato in the 1940's for one dollar each to customers who drove up to 200 miles for his famous plants that bore tasty tomatoes averaging two and a half pounds. With these sales, Charlie managed to pay off his $6,000 mortgage in only six years, and so the tomato was named Mortgage Lifter.