Solanum lycopersicum
SHIPPING RESTRICTION: In order for us to protect the environment and comply with regulations, we're unable to ship this product to the following states: CA, GA, NV.
Overview
Uses: Tomato crop production—produces excellent yields
Benefits: Cordon (produces crops all season). Produces striking lemon yellow (not golden) tomatoes! Sweet, smooth, mild, tangy, and meaty! The perfect taste and color that'll take your salads and sandwiches to the next level!
Zones: 3 - 9 suggested (has been known to survive in all USDA Hardiness Zones)
Sun: Full
Growth: Indeterminate (cordon)
Life Cycle: Annual
Mature Height: As high as 5' with proper staking and fertilization.
Mature Width: 30"
Bloom Season: Summer to Early Fall
Summary
Add bright visual appeal and knockout flavor to your summertime salads!
Lemon Boy Hybrid Tomatoes are best known for their eye-catching, lemon yellow, medium sized fruit that grows to a mature size of roughly 3.5" in diameter and 7 ounces.
Their taste is amazing, and best described as the perfect combination of mild and tangy, meaty, smooth, and slightly sweet. Although these have so many wonderful culinary applications, we're super fans of putting them into salads and sandwiches!
Lemon Boy Tomatoes have an average maturation rate, and should begin to produce their first harvests sometime in the middle of summer, often sustaining their production of crops until mid-fall. One may expect ripe tomatoes about 60-75 days after planting one of our starter plants.
Lemon Boy Hybrid Tomato is an indeterminate variety of tomato, often referred to as a vine or cordon tomato. This means; unlike a determinate variety, they keep growing and producing tomatoes from the beginning of the summer until early fall (determinate varieties stop growing at a certain height, then produce all of their crop within a short time frame).
Does not require staking or caging, although we highly suggest doing such. It grows as a vine, so un-staked plants will travel along the ground, causing their fruit to be more susceptible to rot. Lemon Boy Hybrid tomato plants are known to grow tall, so a strong stake or cage is suggested.
Care
Lemon Boy Hybrid Tomato Plant Care
Lemon Boy Hybrid Tomatoes will likely tolerate temperatures above 40°F, but it's suggested to attempt to keep them in temperatures above 55°F.
Plant 36" apart.
Suggest planting late-March through May depending on temperatures in your area. Keep in temperatures above 55°F.
Does best in temperatures between 75°F and 95°F.
Likes organic, rich soil with lots of drainage.
Make sure to water regularly and attempt to keep soil moist but not wet.
Give early dose of high nitrogen organic fertilizer either when planting or as a part of soil preparation.
Will benefit from a high phosphorus organic fertilizer once established, just prior to or after it begins to produce fruit.
Suggest caging, or staking and providing something to climb, although not required. Unsupported plants will likely grow on the ground in a somewhat vine-like fashion, which will drastically increase the potential of rotting fruit.
You'll know your Lemon Boy Hybrid Tomatoes are ready to harvest once their skin turns their namesake lemon yellow color, and are firm, yet bouncy when squeezed.
Size
Size of Lemon Boy Hybrid Tomato Plants for Sale Online
The Lemon Boy Hybrid Tomatoes that we sell online will ship in a greenhouse grade grow pot. Each plant will be appropriately sized for its pot. Please contact us with any specific questions.
Size of Lemon Boy Hybrid Tomatoes When Fully Grown
Lemon Boy Tomatoes often spread to a width of around 30" when staked and allowed to grow vertical. They're cordon-type growers, so their vines may grow as long as 6' long in certain situations.
Additional Information
Botanical Name of Lemon Boy Hybrid Tomato
The botanical name of Lemon Boy Hybrid Tomato is Solanum lycopersicum.
Toxicity and Risks of Lemon Boy Hybrid Tomatoes
Tomato plants are actually considered toxic. They're members of the nightshade family, and produce an alkaloid called tomatine.
This alkaloid is most present in the unripe fruit, the stem, and the leaves of a tomato plant.
Tomatine is toxic when ingested in extremely large doses, it may cause gastrointestinal problems, liver, and even heart damage.