We pick tomato varieties that thrive in our northern climate so you get the most out of your garden plants.

The availability of specific varieties will vary from market to market based on season and sales.

Small Varieties

Tumbler (48 Days)

Great for growing in pots. Determinate, bushy plants, excellent for hanging baskets. Bright red, sweet fruit.

Sweet Millions (60 Days)

Indeterminate cherry, staking type. Highly adaptable to different growing conditions with incredible yield. A delicious snacking tomato that’s hard to resist.

Candyland (55 Days)

Red currant salad type. Produces about 100 tiny red super sweet fruit.

Tiny Tim (48 Days)

Unique dwarf plants that work very well in small containers, window boxes, hanging baskets, and small garden spaces.

Medium Varieties

Early Girl (59 Days)

4-5oz globe-shaped fruit, makes for great sliced tomatoes. Fruit is longer than other medium-sized varieties

Roma (75 Days)

3oz fruit. Plants are determinate and bushy with a high yield. Great taste and tender skins make for excellent cooking and can grow well in pots.

Golden Rave (65 Days)

Mini roma-type tomatoes are golden yellow and have fantastic flavour. Just as meaty are roma but with the sweet flavour of a grape tomato. Excellent for salsa and sauces. Vigorous indeterminate plants produce very large yields.

Large Varieties

Bush Beefsteak (62 Days)

8oz fruit. Vigorous, determinate plants are bushy and produce rich, red, solid interior fruit perfect for sandwiches.

Sub Arctic Maxi (48 Days)

Determinate compact plants give high yields. Great for cooler growing conditions. Known as the world’s earliest tomato!

Ultra Girl (62 Days)

7-9oz fruit. Semi-determinate, medium-sized plants produce bright red, firm fruit with great resistance to cracking. Perfect for salads, juice, canning, and cooking.

Mixed Packs

Mixed Pack #1

  • Beefsteak
  • Early Girl
  • Candyland

Mixed Pack #2 (available mid May 2025)

  • Beefsteak
  • Sweet Million
  • Roma

Definitions

Determinate: Determinate plants grow to a certain point, and then stop, with a shorter stature overall.

Indeterminate: Indeterminate tomato plants keep growing and producing fruit all season.

Semi-determinate: Semi-determinate varieties keep growing through the season, but generally remain smaller than indeterminate plants, with a bushier habit.”

close