• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

free heirloom Tomato Seeds

You crack me up joker... you always post the oddest things. I have to admit, you keep me entertained - good job as usual. Not sure if I want to become a tomato club member tho😉
 
This is pretty cool. I've eaten *alot* of Heirloom tomatoes and boy, are they better than the tomoatoes engineered for long shelf-life.

I hope the people that take advantage of this deal actually use the seeds.....In fact, please don't abuse this if you don't garden.
 
Originally posted by: SpaceHulk
This is pretty cool. I've eaten *alot* of Heirloom tomatoes and boy, are they better than the tomoatoes engineered for long shelf-life.

I hope the people that take advantage of this deal actually use the seeds.....In fact, please don't abuse this if you don't garden.

Umm, just how, exactly, do you abuse tomatoes seeds, or offers of them?
rolleye.gif
 
Some people will take anything for free whether they plan on using it or not.

Reminds me of an unrelated story a freind told me. He had an old lawn mower by the curb with a sign on it that said free. It sat there for 2 weeks. He changed the sign to say: for sale - $20. He looked out his window the next morning and someone had swiped it.
 
Thanks again, JokerSmoker!

I've been growing tomatoes for years - I never miss a season, and I have 6 plants about 14" high right now. I do buy chemical fertilizer but never bother with potting soil and stuff like that. Instead I compost. Tomatoes are very easy and easily the best bang for the work. A home grown tomato is always way superior to market bought tomatoes. That's because the ones you find in the store are picked green and "ripened" in trays. They don't really ripen, they just turn red and look like tomatoes but never smell and taste like vine ripened tomatoes. I always grow way more than I can eat and I make hot sauce and Italian sauce and can it in jars. I guess I'll take these seeds and see what I get from them. Lately I always grow Early Girl (from seedlings I get at the hardware stores) because it does well in my relatively cool and sometimes foggy climate. I'll see if some of these heirloom seeds do OK here. I will also check out their newsletter for tomato growing tips, although I'm no beginner now. Tomatoes rule. 😀
 
Back
Top