Hero Image

Marin IJ Articles

Popular tomato plant market returns next Saturday

  • Julie McMillan
  • Customers happily line up at the UC Marin Master Gardeners Tomato Market  Photo: UCANR
    Customers happily line up at the UC Marin Master Gardeners Tomato Market Photo: UCANR
    The popular UC Marin Master Gardeners (MMG) Tomato Market plant sale returns after a two-year hiatus Saturday, April 23 at 9 am (until sold out) at Greenbrae’s Bon Air Center and Novato’s Pini Ace Hardware. Choose from sixteen varieties, from cherries to beefsteaks, carefully selected for Marin’s unique microclimates and outstanding flavor. Treasured seedlings are still $4 each. Temperatures are warm enough, so you can start growing now. Come early and bring a small box to carry your plants. The Markets will be outside and follow appropriate Covid-19 protocols.

    Since 2010, MMG have been holding the Tomato Market (except in 2020 and 2021 due to the pandemic). “Marin Master Gardeners are thrilled to bring back the Tomato Market! Since last fall, volunteers have spent hundreds of hours preparing for the Market, carefully selecting the best varieties for Marin, and delicately nurturing these prized seedlings,” explained Roger Pancoska, 2022 MMG Tomato Market Chair.

    Seedlings are grown with care in the Falkirk Greenhouse in San Rafael. Photo: UCANR
    Seedlings are grown with care in the Falkirk Greenhouse in San Rafael. Photo: UCANR
    Choose from six heirlooms and ten hybrid varieties (sixteen plants per customer limit). Expert MMG advisors can help you select what’s best for your microclimate, space constraints, and taste preferences. Other factors to consider: “days” represents the number of days from when you plant the seedling to when fruit first appears, from 55 days (Early Girl) to 85 days (Oaxacan Jewel; Black Beauty); ”container” indicates the nine varieties suited to containers (five gallons or larger works best); and “cool” designates the nine varieties that thrive in cooler, coastal climates.


    Heirloom tomatoes come from seeds at least 50 years old, handed down through generations of growers, and valued for taste, unusual markings, color, and shape. From smallest (cherry) to largest (beefsteak), choose from these heirloom varieties:

    Oaxacan Jewel produces gorgeous golden beefsteaks that can weigh as much as 2 pounds. Photo: UCANR
    Oaxacan Jewel produces gorgeous golden beefsteaks that can weigh as much as 2 pounds. Photo: UCANR

    • Jaune Flamme, sweet and tart cherry from France with clusters of 6-8 apricot-colored fruits, 3-4 ounce; 75 days; container; cool
    • Japanese Black Trifele, pear-shaped with green-streaked shoulders deepening to a darkened, nearly black base; 4-5 ounce, meaty with complex, rich flavor; 75 days; cool
    • Carmello, French variety producing 8-12 ounce slicing tomatoes; 75 days; container; cool 
    • Green Giant, potato-leaved variety producing 12-18 ounce chartreuse green, sweet and spicy fruit; 75 days; cool
    • Cherokee Purple, dark purple 1 pound beefsteak and frequent winner of MMG taste tests; 80 days; container
    • Oaxacan Jewel, 1-2 pound yellow beefsteak with red streaks and brilliant red marbling inside; juicy, rich, and sweet; 85 days


    Hybrids are crossbred from different plants, created for a particular purpose (disease resistance, color, or shape). From smallest to largest fruit, choose from these hybrid varieties:

    As its name suggests, Early Girl starts producing fruit in only 55 days. Photo: UCANR
    As its name suggests, Early Girl starts producing fruit in only 55 days. Photo: UCANR

    • Rapunzel, ¾-1 ounce cherry with cascading trusses of sweet, bright red fruit all summer; 70 days
    • Super Sweet 100, prolific cherry producing 1-ounce sugary flavor into the fall; needs to be staked or caged; 65 days; container; cool
    • Blush Cherry, large enough for slicing, small enough for snacking, with radiant golden elongated 1-ounce fruit drizzled with ruby streaks; 70 days; container; cool
    • Juliet, All-American Selection winner with long, beautiful clusters of 1-2 ounce grape tomatoes on vigorous vines; 60 days; container
    • Sun Gold, 2 ounce sweet-flavored cherry with long clusters of 10-15 fruits; needs to be staked or caged; 65 days; container; cool
    • Black and Brown Boar, 3-4 ounce cherry with great flavor, dark earthy tones; 75 days; cool
    • Early Girl, smooth, red-skinned, meaty 4–6 ounce good for slicing; 55 days; container; cool
    • Granadero, 5 ounce plum with high yields of excellent flavor red fruit for sauces, paste, salsa, and salads; 75 days; container
    • Chef’s Choice, 12-16 ounce beefsteak, All-American Selection winner; disease resistant; 75 days
    • Black Beauty, blue-black, meaty beefsteak reaching 2 ½ pounds with extreme antioxidant content, among the best tasting; 85 days

    The Market provides funds for MMG educational programs at schools, community gardens, public seminars, and education throughout Marin. MMG thanks you for your continued support. For more information about the MMG Tomato Market, details about the varieties, and how to plant and grow tomatoes, please visit Tomato Sale Details and Marin Master Gardener Tomato Sale.