Skip to product information
1 of 2
Référence : 1794A

TOMATO ELBERTA PEACH AB

Solanum lycopersicum

Mid-season variety with a determined shape. Its numerous two-tone cocktail-type fruits are red with yellow stripes. Its foliage and fruits are slightly downy.
The bag of 30 seeds
Regular price 3,80€
Regular price Sale price 3,80€
Sale Sold out
Taxes included. Shipping calculated at checkout.
In stock
Période de semis
From February to April
Période de récolte
From June to September
moderate / daily
70 cm
sun
Obsolete
120 to 150 cm
Open ground
Gelif
75 to 80 days on average
Conditionnement
The bag of 30 seeds
Référence
1794A
Cycle de vie
annual

With their different colors and shapes, they will make your vegetable garden a place of curiosity. Their fragrance and flavor will allow you to discover the pleasure of rediscovered taste.

The Elberta Peach tomato is a mid-season, determinate, large cocktail-type variety that produces numerous bicolored fruits, red with yellow stripes. Its foliage and slightly flattened fruits are fuzzy.
Fruits weighing 60 to 90 g. The Elberta peach tomato is suitable for growing in pots. It has a fleshy, firm flesh. It has a mild flavor. Uses: Salad, stuffing, sauce, coulis, and more. Attracts Colorado potato beetles.

When and how to sow Elberta peach tomatoes?

Sowing: from February to April in a warm bed (20°) or in pots indoors or in a heated greenhouse, in fine seed compost. Tomatoes need a constant minimum temperature of 20°C to germinate.
Bury your tomato seeds 1 cm deep and then cover with seed compost. Water your compost with a sprayer to keep it moist but not soggy. Place your seed tray near a window to prevent your seedlings from shooting upwards in search of light.
Transplant when frost is no longer a risk and the plants are 12 to 15 cm tall in rich, loose, healthy soil. Space 70 cm between rows and 50 cm in the sunny row.
Place the stakes in place before starting to plant. Water thoroughly at the base once a week to prevent disease development.

Should we remove suckers from tomato plants?

Opinions differ on how to approach the infamous pruning of tomatoes, and every gardener has arguments to support their theory. To the question "what to do?" the answer is simple: whatever you want!
Pruning tomatoes by de-suckering is not mandatory; it is intended to increase the size of the fruits, their precocity and to facilitate harvesting work.
This method, however, has two drawbacks: it requires time and discernment. Indeed, the head of the tomato plant is not always easy to distinguish from a secondary branch. Furthermore, removing suckers causes wounds for your plant. It is therefore strongly recommended to consider aiding healing with a dusting of maerl or a green clay wash.
Another option is to not prune at all and allow the plant to fully develop. It will therefore need more space in the garden, i.e. 1 m between each plant. The fruits will be smaller but more numerous.
A third solution is two-pronged training. After pinching the plant 20 cm from the ground, only the two lateral shoots are kept. All the suckers are then removed.

Harvest

You can harvest tomatoes 4 to 5 months after sowing.

The enemies

The main problems that can be encountered when growing tomatoes are late blight and blossom end necrosis (black bottom).
To prevent mildew, the best solution is to protect your plants if you live in a region where it rains frequently. You can also treat your plants with Bordeaux mixture.
Blossom end necrosis or black bottom is not a disease. It is caused either by low calcium levels in the soil or by irregular watering. When the plant lacks water, it produces less sap, and the part furthest from the stem will die due to lack of nutrition. Therefore, water regularly, abundantly once a week for example.

View full details

Farm advice

La diversité des courgettes à la Ferme de Sainte MArthe

Les 10 Meilleures Courgettes de la Ferme de Sai...

Voici notre sélection des 10 courgettes incontournables, présentes à notre catalogue, choisies pour leur saveur, leur originalité, leur intérêt cultural et leur tolérance aux maladies.

Plants de tomates

Les 10 conseils pour ne pas rater sa culture de...

Cultiver ses propres tomates est un vrai plaisir au jardin. Leur goût, leur parfum, leur diversité de formes et de couleurs… Rien ne vaut une tomate cueillie à maturité sur...

Customer Reviews

Be the first to write a review
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)