🌟 Cultivate Your Garden's Glory with Pink Oxheart Tomatoes!
These 75+ Pink Oxheart Tomato Seeds are an heirloom variety known for their impressive 85% germination rate and large, heart-shaped fruits weighing 1 to 2+ pounds. With a meaty texture and exceptional taste, these tomatoes are perfect for slicing and are a prolific producer, yielding consistently heavy harvests in just 75 days from transplant.
P**P
Good germination rate
I planted 72 of the seeds and had 100% germination. Plants are grown strong, there about 12” high at this time, hope to have a good yield.
R**S
Tomato
Love these there a old family favorite.
D**R
Germination rate middling
I'm doing a combo of square foot gardening and the Kratky method for growing some vegetables. I tried hydroponics and the Kratky for large plants because of the low rainfall I'm experiencing, but it's a lot of monitoring. Decided to try out square foot gardening which I've been wanting to try out for a long time. I only start a few seeds at a time due to space limitations. I bought this for my Dad since he remembers this from when he was a boy and was commenting that he hasn't seen it in years. I sowed 7 seeds in Jiffy 1.5" peat pods. Got about 3 seeds germinating. I'm storing the extra seeds in the refrigerator in an air tight container. I just planted out one in a square and am going to plant out one in a Kratky bucket, will update as I go on.
J**N
56% germination rate
First, I'm attempting to grow these indoors under grow lights as well as a sunny window. They germinated rather quickly... And once they actually germinated they grew quickly... I'm pleased with the health of the plants, but I guess 56% germination it's too bad. Better than some seed that I've purchased from Amazon with ZERO germination... I'm hoping that the plants produce as hearty a fruit. This is my first attempt at this particular hybrid... We will see.... Update... First tomato foto attached. Absolutely delicious. Doesn't have the acidity of regular tomatoes...
G**N
They Grow, I don't believe I had a seed that didn't grow.
I'm no expert when it comes to early seed growing. Needless to say I've always had luck with these seeds, even though I'm an amateur. What I can tell you in my noob stages two seasons ago, not good, they grew. In the end I managed to grow some winners in my first and second season. This is my third. Goal, 8 winners and backups. Achieved. My success had probably a lot to do with seed warmer pads, and they got guaranteed morning sun. Plants are alarmingly large, it makes me think I shouldn't have started in the middle of February. Nebraska climate mind you. By May the plants were huge! Like a month early. I wanted to stick them in the ground sooner but the weather was too cold. The point of this story is this. I followed a generic seed planter and planted these seeds, they always grew. This year, I might have gotten the conditions right. I don't grow much as seeds outside tomatoes. But I can say I have had worse results with other seeds messing around. And I'm no expert in tomatoes, but my Asian cousins from a crossed the pond said these tomatoes were better than the Super Beefcake tomato plants you can grow here. Maybe they know something I don't. I simply like a sandwich sized slice tomato over a sandwich with bacon.
D**D
REceived yesterday
Still in the envelope, will plant in the spring.
S**.
Great tomatos!
I grew these in 7 gallon grow bags last year on our deck and have reordered seeds for 2021. The plants reached about 8 feet tall and produced nice fruits until late August in Georgia. The flesh is meaty, not full of "jelly" and with a great flavor. All the family enjoyed then so I'm growing them again this year. Still, like any other variety, you must know how to grow and care for tomatoes.
B**.
Seedlings all died after shouting and getting to 1 inch tall
They dead yo
Trustpilot
4 days ago
5 days ago