50% OFF ALL SEED PACKETS, FREE SHIPPING ON JUST SEED ORDERS OVER $20
50% OFF ALL SEED PACKETS, FREE SHIPPING ON JUST SEED ORDERS OVER $20
no code needed and sale may not be combined with discounts or points
no code needed and sale may not be combined with discounts or points
Seed orders are shipping 7-10 Business Days After Being Placed
Seed orders are shipping 7-10 Business Days After Being Placed
Indeterminate - The Mexico Midget tomato is a prolific heirloom variety known for its abundant clusters of tiny, red cherry tomatoes. Each fruit measures about half an inch in diameter, bursting with intense, sweet-tart flavor. Ideal for snacking, salads, and garnishes, these tomatoes offer a delightful bite-sized treat. The vigorous plants are highly productive and thrive in various climates, displaying excellent disease resistance.
The description of Mexico Midget is spot on, it was prolific, heat tolerant and produced so many tiny tomatoes. But, the plant itself was also extremely hardy and resilient. I container garden and had a Mexico Midget plant on a shelf on my balcony and the wind had knocked it off the shelf a couple times (before I remedied the issue) & a branch broke. It did not phase the plant one bit; it continued to produce tomatoes well into the fall.
All seeds germinated & I gave plants away; the recipients commented on how many tomatoes their plants produced and how much they loved the flavor.
I tried this for the first time a few years ago and fell in love! This is the best little tomato and is super prolific. Lots of flavor packed into such a little tomato.
This was my first time growing Mexico Midget. I'm in Southern California. I grew four plants in containers at different times during the season. Each plants produced vigorously for 2 or 3 weeks, then died, liked a determine. Also, they definitely needed to be staked, so for me, that makes them not-so dwarf-like. They were tasty.
I normally will only eat a tomato if it's cold but the Mexico Midget is one that I had no problem picking & eating right in my garden. I garden in containers & these tomatoes grew very well & produced a lot.
I grew these in several gardens this year here in central Pennsylvania. They produced well in all of them. I had extreme difficulty growing these using a stake. Much better luck with cages although heavy pruning was needed due to extreme growth. They grow out of 54" cages by several feet and get very bushy. Tons of production though so it made it easier to prune off excess growth without feeling too guilty about it. A tasty red tomato. This one and Dwarf Eagle Smiley were my cherry tomato varieties this year. With over a dozen people trialing both, the Eagle Smiley was divided roughly 50/50 although I personally did like it. This one was the hands down favorite though. Everyone liked this one. I will grow it again.
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I grew only a few seeds, but they came up fine, and I was able to get some delicious, sweet melon! I sprayed it once with a copper fungicide, and I should have done it a second time, but I still go melons. (I have a struggle with fungal problems here). Easy to grow, easy to eat!
This stuff feed my garden all summer. Highly recommend
This was one of my first tomatoes from MIgardener seed and I loved it so much. Very tasty green tomato, and even though it was only in a smallish container, it was one of my best producers! Nice clusters (not quite so big and dense as the photo, for me at least...) and great flavor for eating fresh in the garden. I'm not the best with tomatoes, I don't treat them as well as I should, and I grow in Seattle (8b?) which is finicky weather every year, so I was surprised these did so well! Will definitely grow again. Unfortunately I don't have any pictures saved on the vine, but the little green one in the attached photo is one of them!
Love sales. Time to stock up
Pollinators love this flower. Especially honey bees.
They grew in spring then reseeded themselves for fall.