Early Girl
Hybrid tomato / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Early Girl tomato is a medium-sized globe-type F1 hybrid popular with home gardeners because of its early ripening fruit. Early Girl is a cultivar of tomato with indeterminate growth, which means it produces flowers and fruit until it is killed by frost or another external factor (contrast with a determinate cultivar, which would grow to a limited, predefined shape and be most productive for one large harvest before dying or tapering off with minimal new growth or fruit). It grows tall, therefore it needs support as the plant grows. Fruit maturity ranges from 50 to 62 days (1.6 to 2.0 mo) after transplanting, depending on the source, which appeals to growers in climates with shorter growing seasons. Early Girl can tolerate temperatures as low as 40 °F (4 °C)[1] and is well-suited to hot, dry climates.[2] Early girl is reliable and prolific.
Early Girl | |
---|---|
Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) | |
Maturity | 50 days |
Type | Hybrid |
Vine | Indeterminate |
Plant height | 9 feet |
Fruit weight | 8 oz |
Leaf | Regular leaf |
Color | Red |
Shape | Globe |
The ripe fruit is extremely standard for a tomato, about the size and shape of a tennis ball and weighing 4 to 8 ounces (110 to 230 g). The tomatoes have a bright color and good flavor.