Our 2025 Garden: something new, and tomato decisions made

While I was out and about today, I found myself standing in line at the grocery store, right near a seed display. So, of course, I went looking.

Yeah. I bought more seeds.

In going through my seeds, I was thinking of what slicing tomato to grow this year. I had decided on doing the Spoon tomatoes, and will make a point of saving seeds from those, but for the family, I wanted a slicing tomato and a snacking tomato. I saw the two varieties of black tomato seeds we grew a couple of years back, and somehow completely missed the packet of Forme de Couer tomatoes (I think it was stuck to the back of another seed packet) that we grew last year. The black tomatoes took such a long time to mature, I figured it was worth getting these to try.

Sub Arctic Plenty tomatoes, which need only 40-59 days to harvest, after transplanting outdoors. In the next photo, you can read that this variety was developed in Alberta specifically for our prairie climate, is a determinate tomato and does not need staking.

The “It grows here” guarantee is a nice touch.

Well worth the try. Hopefully, it will even taste good.

After I finished doing my evening rounds early and tending to the new mama in the sun room, I got my daughter to help me take some things to the basement, then we went through the packets of tomato seeds together, so she could help choose one more variety.

We ended up with two.

For a snacking tomato, I’ll start some Chocolate Cherry tomatoes. My daughter, however, spotted the packet of Black Beauty tomato seeds. While these took forever to ripen, and had a tendency to split like no other tomato we’ve grown, she says they were the most delicious tomatoes we’ve grown to date.

So we will have two types of slicing tomatoes. One short season variety and one long season. Depending on how things work out, the Sub Arctic Plenty tomatoes should be done and harvested just in time for the Black Beauties to start ripening.

That makes four varieties of tomatoes we will be growing this year, and I will make sure to NOT start too many seeds! With the different places we’ve tried tomatoes before, I have a better idea of where I will transplant these. Most definitely not in the blocks along the chain link fence, for starters! I figure I will shoot for four transplants of each variety. That should be enough for out needs, since we will not be freezing or canning any tomatoes we grow this year.

Either tonight or tomorrow, I will head back into the dungeon and set some seeds up to pre-germinate. The tomatoes will wait until the first week of April, but there are other things I can start now.

I have decided to go ahead and try the luffa again, after all. They will get transplanted into large pots and be kept in the new portable greenhouse we got for the entire growing season.

I will also start pre-germinating seeds for winter squash, but I think I’ll sow the Turkish eggplant right away into seed starting mix, rather than pre-germinate them. I don’t feel like pre-germinating smaller seeds. I will pre-germinate the melon seeds, but not until April.

And that’s where we are at, for now!

The Re-Farmer

6 thoughts on “Our 2025 Garden: something new, and tomato decisions made

  1. What fun! I just started some tomatoes too, indoors. They can be tricky in cooler climates. I wouldn’t bother with them at all, but my husband likes them. Anytime he is willing to eat something that almost resembles a veggie, we try to accommodate him. :)

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    • In previous years, I would have started them already, potting up several times, but this year, I’m listening to Ashley from Gardening in Canada. She’s even further North than I am, grew up on a farm and is a soil scientist. She says don’t start tomatoes until April. So I’ll give it a go! I don’t eat them myself, unless they are thorough processed (otherwise, tomatoes make me gag), but the family loves them, so grow them I will! 😁

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      • I’ve got the table and grow lamps all set up and I’m starting seeds tomorrow.

        I’m being deployed for two weeks starting the end of this week, so it’s start now or wait until mid April.

        By the way, this morning at 8am, it was minus 9C and at 4pm, it was 21C!

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      • Thanks..Not much can go wrong in a warehouse deployment. :-)

        Those temperature swings seem to be normal for rural high elevation deserts. It was very similar where I grew up.

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      • It’s pretty normal in parts of Alberta, with the chinook winds. When I lived in Alberta, we were far enough north that is wasn’t quite that extremes, but we did have a few brown Christmases!

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