Tomato Yellow Pear, also known as Solanum lycopersicum, is an heirloom cherry tomato. This variety reaches 24-36" wide and 60-72" tall caged or staked in the garden. Plants produce prolific 1.5", 4-ounce, yellow, tangy fruits. These small, juicy tomatoes are excellent for snacking, salads, and hors d'oeuvre. This plant is indeterminate and matures in 75 days. This cherry tomato plant flourishes in full sun with regular water, an obvious addition to the vegetable garden or a patio container. For a variety well-suited to canning, sauces, and pastes, grow San Marzano.
Tomato Yellow Pear Selling Tips
Sell Tomato Yellow Pear to customers looking for a unique cherry tomato for the vegetable garden and culinary use. This variety offers prolific yellow, pear-shaped cherry tomatoes on an indeterminate plant that flourishes in warm weather and full sun. Grow tomatoes alongside peppers, zucchini, and onions in the garden. Germinating tomato plants from seed can be tricky, so customers love finding a wide variety of plants available at the local nursery.
Coach Your Customer
1. Plant outside once nighttime temperatures are consistently 60 degrees. Space plants 24-36" apart in well-drained soil in full sun.
2. Till soil 8-10" deep and cover with dark mulch about a week before planting to warm the soil. Mulch will also help maintain moisture throughout the growing season.
3. Water regularly, one or two inches of rainwater or irrigation per week. Supplement rainwater by watering at the base of the plant in dry weather. Water thoroughly once or twice a week to give the roots plenty of consistent water and help prevent cracking on fruits.
4. Cage tomato plants or tie them loosely to a stake. Trim side shoots and prune plants to encourage fruit-bearing branches to flourish. Remove the bottom 6-10" of leaves once the plant has reached 12" tall or more to prevent disease and keep fruit from touching the ground.
5. Harvest tomatoes throughout the season once they are ripe. Just before frost, pick all the almost-ripe fruits and ripen them on a newspaper at room temperature. Store tomatoes temporarily at 50-60 degrees. Don't refrigerate them. For long-term storage, freeze or can any variety.
General Growing Tips For Your Seedling Tray
For best results with Tomato Yellow Pear, plant one seedling per 1801 cell or 4-inch container. Use well-drained soil with a pH of 5.5-6.2, EC less than 1.0 mS/cm, temperatures of 60-70 daytime and 50-60 nighttime, light levels of 4,000-5,000 fc, and medium feed (150-200 ppm N). This plant doesn't require pinching, and we don't recommend using PGRs on vegetables. You may see aphids and whiteflies. Root rot can develop in overly wet conditions.
Flowering
This plant is grown for culinary use.
Pinching
This plant doesn't require pinching.
Spacing
Space containers for adequate airflow and sunlight penetration to the soil level of each plant.
Height Control
We don't recommend using chemical growth regulators on vegetable plants.
Pests
Watch for aphids and whiteflies.
Coach Your Customer: Pests can attack tomato plants in the garden, most notably nematodes and tomato hornworms. Plant tomatoes in a different location every year, especially if nematodes have eaten the roots of your plants in the previous year. Marigolds often repel nematodes planted alongside tomatoes. Look out for tomato hornworms, large green caterpillars that eat the foliage. Remove them by hand to a bucket of soapy water. If the hornworm is covered in white spots, leave the worm and eggs on the plant. Those white spots are wasp eggs that parasitize the hornworm and benefit your garden.
Disease
Tomatoes aren't prone to disease but root rot can develop in overly wet conditions. Water at the base of each plant in the morning, allowing the soil to dry between waterings. Provide good airflow in your greenhouse and space containers so air and sunlight can reach the base of each plant.
Planting Tomato Yellow Pear Liners
We recommend planting one seedling per 1801-cell or 4-inch container. Use well-drained soil and center the seedling in the container. Cell packs finish in 2-3 weeks.
Rooted Cuttings
Cuttings vary in size between different plant families. These rooted starter plants will arrive ready to be transplanted in to your final container. If they are to be used in a landscape application, you will need to establish them in a 4 inch pot or an 1801 before planting outside.
Tomato Yellow Pear Quick Reference Guide
4 Inch crop time
4-5 Weeks
Habit
Upright
Height
5-6 Feet
Light
Full Sun
Minimum Temp
50
Water Needs
Moderate
Patented Plant
No
Current Availability
Current Availability
02-17-2025 (Week 08)
0
02-24-2025 (Week 09)
0
03-03-2025 (Week 10)
0
03-10-2025 (Week 11)
3,744
03-17-2025 (Week 12)
3,500
03-24-2025 (Week 13)
3,750
03-31-2025 (Week 14)
3,750
04-07-2025 (Week 15)
3,750
04-14-2025 (Week 16)
4,000
04-21-2025 (Week 17)
4,000
04-28-2025 (Week 18)
4,000
05-05-2025 (Week 19)
4,000
05-12-2025 (Week 20)
4,000
05-19-2025 (Week 21)
4,000
05-26-2025 (Week 22)
4,000
06-02-2025 (Week 23)
4,000
06-09-2025 (Week 24)
4,000
06-16-2025 (Week 25)
4,000
06-23-2025 (Week 26)
4,000
06-30-2025 (Week 27)
4,000
07-07-2025 (Week 28)
4,000
07-14-2025 (Week 29)
0
07-21-2025 (Week 30)
0
07-28-2025 (Week 31)
0
08-04-2025 (Week 32)
0
08-11-2025 (Week 33)
0
08-18-2025 (Week 34)
0
08-25-2025 (Week 35)
0
09-01-2025 (Week 36)
0
09-08-2025 (Week 37)
0
09-15-2025 (Week 38)
0
09-22-2025 (Week 39)
0
09-29-2025 (Week 40)
0
10-06-2025 (Week 41)
0
10-13-2025 (Week 42)
0
10-20-2025 (Week 43)
0
10-27-2025 (Week 44)
0
11-03-2025 (Week 45)
0
11-10-2025 (Week 46)
0
Tomato Yellow Pear, also known as Solanum lycopersicum, is an heirloom cherry tomato. This variety reaches 24-36" wide and 60-72" tall caged or staked in the garden. Plants produce prolific 1.5", 4-ounce, yellow, tangy fruits. These small, juicy tomatoes are excellent for snacking, salads, and hors d'oeuvre. This plant is indeterminate and matures in 75 days. This cherry tomato plant flourishes in full sun with regular water, an obvious addition to the vegetable garden or a patio container. For a variety well-suited to canning, sauces, and pastes, grow San Marzano.
Tomato Yellow Pear Selling Tips
Sell Tomato Yellow Pear to customers looking for a unique cherry tomato for the vegetable garden and culinary use. This variety offers prolific yellow, pear-shaped cherry tomatoes on an indeterminate plant that flourishes in warm weather and full sun. Grow tomatoes alongside peppers, zucchini, and onions in the garden. Germinating tomato plants from seed can be tricky, so customers love finding a wide variety of plants available at the local nursery.
Coach Your Customer
1. Plant outside once nighttime temperatures are consistently 60 degrees. Space plants 24-36" apart in well-drained soil in full sun.
2. Till soil 8-10" deep and cover with dark mulch about a week before planting to warm the soil. Mulch will also help maintain moisture throughout the growing season.
3. Water regularly, one or two inches of rainwater or irrigation per week. Supplement rainwater by watering at the base of the plant in dry weather. Water thoroughly once or twice a week to give the roots plenty of consistent water and help prevent cracking on fruits.
4. Cage tomato plants or tie them loosely to a stake. Trim side shoots and prune plants to encourage fruit-bearing branches to flourish. Remove the bottom 6-10" of leaves once the plant has reached 12" tall or more to prevent disease and keep fruit from touching the ground.
5. Harvest tomatoes throughout the season once they are ripe. Just before frost, pick all the almost-ripe fruits and ripen them on a newspaper at room temperature. Store tomatoes temporarily at 50-60 degrees. Don't refrigerate them. For long-term storage, freeze or can any variety.
General Growing Tips For Your Seedling Tray
For best results with Tomato Yellow Pear, plant one seedling per 1801 cell or 4-inch container. Use well-drained soil with a pH of 5.5-6.2, EC less than 1.0 mS/cm, temperatures of 60-70 daytime and 50-60 nighttime, light levels of 4,000-5,000 fc, and medium feed (150-200 ppm N). This plant doesn't require pinching, and we don't recommend using PGRs on vegetables. You may see aphids and whiteflies. Root rot can develop in overly wet conditions.
Flowering
This plant is grown for culinary use.
Pinching
This plant doesn't require pinching.
Spacing
Space containers for adequate airflow and sunlight penetration to the soil level of each plant.
Height Control
We don't recommend using chemical growth regulators on vegetable plants.
Pests
Watch for aphids and whiteflies.
Coach Your Customer: Pests can attack tomato plants in the garden, most notably nematodes and tomato hornworms. Plant tomatoes in a different location every year, especially if nematodes have eaten the roots of your plants in the previous year. Marigolds often repel nematodes planted alongside tomatoes. Look out for tomato hornworms, large green caterpillars that eat the foliage. Remove them by hand to a bucket of soapy water. If the hornworm is covered in white spots, leave the worm and eggs on the plant. Those white spots are wasp eggs that parasitize the hornworm and benefit your garden.
Disease
Tomatoes aren't prone to disease but root rot can develop in overly wet conditions. Water at the base of each plant in the morning, allowing the soil to dry between waterings. Provide good airflow in your greenhouse and space containers so air and sunlight can reach the base of each plant.
Planting Tomato Yellow Pear Liners
We recommend planting one seedling per 1801-cell or 4-inch container. Use well-drained soil and center the seedling in the container. Cell packs finish in 2-3 weeks.
Rooted Cuttings
Cuttings vary in size between different plant families. These rooted starter plants will arrive ready to be transplanted in to your final container. If they are to be used in a landscape application, you will need to establish them in a 4 inch pot or an 1801 before planting outside.
Tomato Yellow Pear Quick Reference Guide
4 Inch crop time
4-5 Weeks
Habit
Upright
Height
5-6 Feet
Light
Full Sun
Minimum Temp
50
Water Needs
Moderate
Patented Plant
No
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