
Tomato Plant Lingo
Pruning, staking, pinching, tying up branches are all jobs that come with a good tomato harvest. Particularly indeterminate plants which are simply plants that continue to grow quite large and fruit continuously until frost. Determinate plants, or “bush” plants grow to a more compact height (4-6 feet high), stop growing when the fruit sets on the terminal or top bud, and ripens the entire crop at once, approximately over a 2 week period and then dies. But what if you could have a compact plant, 3 to 4 feet, that produces all season long? Intrigued when I heard about a project for developing dwarf tomato plants,  I wanted more information and seeds to try them. More space to grow more varieties? Deal me in!

I grow tomatoes in a pretty large space, 60′ x 40′, and when empty it looks like I could fit a lot of veggies in that wide open area. But once I start planting out my 12 to 15 tomato plants (sometimes more), along with squash, lettuce, beans, and other assorted cutting flowers, the space shrinks considerably and I run out of room. A fully grown caged tomato plant turns into a monster with branch tentacles that reach out of the cage in all directions so that it is hard to pass between plants. I was ready for some compact plants. And I love to try new varieties. Go to Pushing the Tomato Envelope to see some suggestions.

Dwarf Tomatoes Are Here!
Thanks to the Dwarf Tomato Breeding Project, a 2006 brainstorm between Craig LeHouillier, a tomato hobbyist, and Patrina Nuske Small, an Australian gardener, citizen scientists pitched in and are working on an all-volunteer, all-amateur, open-source worldwide non-profit breeding effort. A team of everyday backyard growers from all over the world in the northern hemisphere and southern hemisphere collaborated which meant that two generations of experiments could be done in a single calendar year-thus cutting the time of development in half.

Great Taste
The goal of the project was to develop great new dwarf varieties on sturdy and compact plants with high yields and colorful fruits and of course – great taste. There are lots of space-challenged tomato lovers who would jump at the chance at growing any of these varieties as long as the taste remains the same high quality either in containers or in a garden. Described as sweet and mild, tart, smoky, rich, and even salty, the taste of the new varieties will please any tomato lovers palate.

Craig LeHouillier
Craig LeHouillier, known as Tomatoman and for his introduction to the world – the luscious Cherokee Purple tomato– and Patrina Small were the driving force behind the project of crossing colorful tasty, indeterminate heirloom tomatoes and the few available dwarf tomato varieties to produce unique hybrids. Six to ten generations were planted out to stabilize a new variety and volunteers grow these new varieties for carefully selected seed companies to distribute. The new varieties are great-tasting, open-pollinated tomatoes that require less space and are easier to take care of.


Attributes
Dwarf tomatoes have crinkly dark-green leaves, termed “rugose” and grow about half of the height of an indeterminate tomato, around 3 to 4 feet.

There are early, mid-season, and late season fruit options so you can enjoy dwarf varieties all season long, just like in the larger heirlooms. The central stems are thicker than other tomatoes and the fruit comes in the 3 to 18 ounce range. So, these aren’t dwarf fruit! Colors range across the tomato spectrum with orange, stripes, yellow, amber, bi-colors, stripes, blacks (purple & chocolate), pink, red, white and green (when ripe) shades; A veritable rainbow! For more information about the project, go to Dwarf Tomato Project.

Sources
So where can gardeners pick these up and what kind of selection is available? According to Craig LeHouillier, “We have 60 in seed catalogs (mostly between the four companies Victory, Sample Seed Shop, Heritage Seed Market and Tatiana’s TOMATObase). Probably another 5-6 coming out next year, and dozens in development”.
I have already ordered my seeds as it is time to start those seeds right now!
Southern Exposure Seed Exchange
A good project for your garden club to sell the small tomato plants at May Fair. I prefer red, and would certainly purchase a plant or two.
If I only had room for garden club plants! I max out my grow lights on all my starts for my garden
Wow! I had no idea there were so many varieties of tomatoes. I’m always afraid to grow many because I don’t know what to do with them all. I’m not a canning person. Lots of good information and since we will have an early spring, It’s time to get going on them.
Hi Claire! I’m not clear on how these plants are different from determinate tomato plants?
Determinate plants still grow very large, 6 feet or more, set fruit, and then stop. Thanks for pointing that out, I will clarify the post.
It’s a small world again! Craig and his wife are acquaintance of mine. Both are super people! I’ve just been in recent contact with him re a presentation to my Herb Society, here in Raleigh, NC. I have attended several of his talks as well as , what I like to call.. his ” tomato tasting events in the past….. Always many thanks for your informative post and beautiful photos! I hope to work in the White House again.
Me also, Thanks for reading!
I broke up with my tomatoes – too much drama. Now I just buy them at the Farmers Market. But these do look wonderful!
Beautiful tomatoes!
Just such breathtaking variety and beauty! We’re planning our first vegetable patch this year and your dwarf tomatoes have inspired me.
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Pole pruners? I always need good pole pruners!
Hi Thanks for posting this I found it informative and you have inspired me to grow more varieties of tomatoes this season than I was going to. This year is international year of the tomato apparently so I suppose we all should do our bit.
A couple of years ago I grew New Big Dwarf in my garden, I found them to be very interesting, short plants with dark crinkly leaves, I was hooked. Glad to see all the new varieties, this year I growing 5 varieties, can’t wait for fall.
they are attractive!
so cool!