Tomato Mountain Magic: The Art of Seed Saving for Future Planting

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Tomato Mountain Magic is a popular variety of tomato that is known for its exceptional flavor and productivity. This variety is a hybrid that was developed specifically for home gardeners who want to be able to enjoy delicious tomatoes straight from their own backyard. One of the key features of Tomato Mountain Magic is its adaptability to various growing conditions. This variety can be grown in both containers and traditional garden beds, making it a versatile choice for gardeners with limited space. In terms of flavor, Tomato Mountain Magic is often described as having a well-balanced taste. It is both sweet and tangy, making it an excellent choice for eating fresh or using in a variety of culinary dishes.


We’re a values-based business that has blossomed into a lifestyle ethos, with products that support seeders, feeders, keepers, and the tiniest of creepers. Our mission? To mobilize the next generation of gardeners with products that nourish soil and grow vigorous, sustainable gardens. We believe all plants should be grown without the use of chemicals, and that the seeds we supply are an important component of regenerative gardening.

The pinnacle of flavor and eating quality, these picture-perfect fruit are brilliant red with a juicy, smooth interior with low acid and high sugars. An array of nutrients and antioxidants including the especially potent lycopene, found in its highest concentration in tomatoes, supports healthy eyesight, cardiovascular health, cancer-fighting capacity, and more.

Tomato mountai magic

It is both sweet and tangy, making it an excellent choice for eating fresh or using in a variety of culinary dishes. The tomatoes are medium-sized and have a vibrant red color, making them visually appealing as well. Not only does Tomato Mountain Magic produce flavorful tomatoes, but it also produces them in abundance.

Mountain Magic Coated

This amazing tomato is a favourite with several local growers, and super productive here in south coastal BC. Mountain Magic tomato seeds produce very sweet cocktail-type fruits, larger than cherry tomatoes, but just the right size for fresh salads. Read More

Matures in 66 days

Season Warm season

Shipping & Returns

West Coast Seeds ships anywhere in North America. However, we are not able to ship garlic, potatoes, asparagus crowns, bulbs, onion sets, Mason bee cocoons, or nematodes outside of Canada. We regret, we cannot accept returns or damages for orders outside of Canada. The minimum shipping charge to the US is $9.99.

Mountain Magic Coated Companions Shop All Scarlet Nantes From $3.49 Masai Bush Bean Seeds From $4.49 Dillon Organic From $3.69 Roxynante Organic From $11.99 Lettuce Leaf Basil From $3.69 Tasty Green From $4.99 Tom Thumb From $3.29 Early Fortune Organic From $3.99

Product Details

This amazing tomato is a favourite with several local growers, and very productive. Mountain Magic tomato seeds produce very sweet cocktail-type fruits, larger than cherry tomatoes, but just the right size for fresh salads. The high-yielding plants produce round, red, crack resistant fruits on early maturing vines. The plants boast high resistance to Fusarium Wilt races 0 to 2, late blight, and Verticillium Wilt, with intermediate resistance to early blight. It good choice for coastal growers who face the risk of blight in late summer. These seeds are coated with an inert, organically certified layer which helps to minimize clumping in storage and seed sowing machines. The coating is approved by organic certifiers in Canada, the US, EU, and Japan. Matures in 66 days. (Hybrid seeds)

Quick Facts:

    • Super sweet flavourful
    • High yielding vine plants
    • Cocktail-type fruits
    • Disease resistant
    • Hybrid seeds

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    Mountain Magic Coated

    All About Mountain Magic Coated

    Difficulty

    Difficulty
    Moderately challenging

    Timing

    Timing
    Start indoors in early spring over bottom heat. When seedlings germinate, remove from the heat and grow under bright lights. Grow seedlings on for 6-8 weeks at around 10°C (50°F). Early season tomatoes can be planted out once night time temperatures are reliably above 7°C (45°F) - or later. Other types should be transplanted out when night time lows are 10°C (50°F) or warmer - or later. Optimal soil temperature for germination: 25-35°C (68-95°F). With bottom heat seeds should germinate in 7-14 days.

    Starting

    Starting
    Sow seeds 5mm-1cm (¼-½”) deep. Keep seedlings under very bright light to prevent legginess. You may have to pot on seedlings more than once before they go out to allow for root growth. Space bush (determinate) transplants 45-60cm (18-24″) apart and vine (indeterminate) types 50-75cm (20-30″) apart in rows 1m (3′) apart.

    Days to Maturity:

    Days to Maturity: From transplant date.

    Growing

    Growing
    Ideal pH: 6.0-6.8. Tomatoes like fertile, well drained soil that is rich in organic matter. Dig in finished compost and manure, and add 1 cup balanced organic fertilizer beneath each transplant. The nutrition from heavy clay soils is excellent for tomatoes, but they are slow to warm, so transplanting should be done later. By the same token, lighter soils warm more quickly, so transplants can go out sooner. Adding glacial rock dust will supply all the calcium they will need. Regular watering is vital, but don’t let the plants sit in water. Tomatoes are tropical plants so they require full sun and lots of heat. Vine varieties will require some kind of support such as a wire to grow up, or a trellis to be tied to as the plant grows. Bush types benefit from the support of a tomato cage in order to prevent sprawling. At the time of final transplant, plants can be buried up to their first pair of true leaves. This will encourage greater root growth, helping with both nutrient uptake and the plants’ ability to stand up to dry conditions.
    Stop watering around the end of July to encourage the fruit to ripen. If tomato plants are grown under cover, you can encourage pollination and fruit set by tapping the stem from time to time. Tomatoes do not rely on insects for pollination. Vibrating the plant shakes pollen loose within the flowers, which then self-pollinate.


    Indeterminate tomatoes continue to grow and produce fruit until they are killed by frost. Remove any suckers (stems growing from the crotch of leaves) to keep the foliage under control, and they will set a later crop of larger fruit. Determinate varieties normally set fruit in a concentrated time period. Their suckers are not normally removed, though some trimming helps with ventilation.

    Harvest

    Harvest
    Harvest when the fruit is the desired colour. Green tomatoes can be ripened indoors at a cool temperature when they are blemish free. Very dark green tomatoes are unlikely to ripen fully.

    Seed Info

    Seed Info
    At least 75% of seeds will germinate in optimal conditions. Usual seed life: 3 years.

    Diseases & Pests

    Diseases & Pests
    Blossom End Rot is an environmental disorder caused by a calcium deficiency. As the name of the disorder indicates it occurs at the blossom end of the fruit. It appears as a brownish dry and firm sunken area. Sometimes a secondary infection can occur at the damaged area, which turns it mushy and wet. Internal blackening can occur without the characteristic end rot. Calcium deficiency can happen when there is uneven watering. When the plants are too dry for a period followed by over watering, this encourages fast growth. The tomato plant can’t take up enough calcium resulting in an unbalanced potassium-to-calcium ratio. Early fruit show the affects sooner than later fruit. Digging in bonemeal, dolomite lime and a balanced organic fertilizer such as Gaia All Purpose Blend 4-4-4 will help prevent this disease as will an even and regular watering schedule.

    An airborne fungal disease causes Late Blight. It begins as leaf spots before spreading to stems and fruit. Water soaked areas appear on the leaves. These are greenish black and irregular in shape. Brown cankers develop on the stems and fruit. Blight infected tomatoes can have a fishy smell. Often the fruit manages to almost reach maturity before the cankers take over. Sometimes a bluish grey mould grows on the underside of infected leaves and on the fruit cankers.

    Prevention is key as there is no cure for the disease. Keep moisture off the plants. Use drip tape for watering and avoid splashing the leaves. Our cloche system is excellent for keeping rain and moisture off the plants. In a greenhouse or under a cloche, humidity can build up so high that the fungus will destroy plants in 24 hours. You must ventilate well.

    Bordo Copper Spray applied regularly in late summer prevents the fungus that causes Late Blight to germinate. If applied with the OMRI listed Superflow Natural Surfactant the copper spray will stay on longer and there will be less need to apply other than after each rainfall or heavy dew.

    General Information on Late Blight:

    General Information on Late Blight: Phytopthera infestans is the fungus that infects tomatoes and potatoes, and is dreadful on the Coast. Greyish black areas appear first on stems and leaves, moving rapidly to kill the plant. The critical factor is moisture. Blight infects tomato plants with leaves and stems that are moist for over 48 hours. Moisture can be from rain, heavy dew, high humidity in a greenhouse or cover, condensation, or irrigation water. Once you know this, you can plan a shelter under an overhanging eve, on a porch or under a structure that you create. The protection must have excellent ventilation and must give you access to pick and prune your tomatoes. Consider growing your tomatoes in containers that can be moved to sheltered spots out of the rain.

    Prevention of Late Blight:

    Prevention of Late Blight: Late blight overwinters in tomato and potato debris. Do not plant in a bed used to grow tomatoes or potatoes last year, and dispose of diseased plants in the garbage not the compost. Copper spray can prevent the fungus from infecting the plant. Plants must be sprayed every 7-10 days before any symptoms appear. Blight strikes in the rains of late summer, so choose at least one variety that will ripen before the deluge. The best advice we can offer to avoid blight is to grow early ripening bush varieties and to protect your vines carefully.

    Flea Beetles make many tiny holes in the tomato leaves. They can cause problems for small tender transplants but a healthy plant can usually outgrow the damage. Use our Floating Row Cover for early season protection from Flea Beetles when transplanting your tomatoes.

    Companion Planting

    Companion Planting
    Another sensitive plant when it comes to companions, tomatoes benefit from asparagus, basil, beans, borage, carrots, celery, chives, collards, cucumber, garlic, lettuce, marigold, mint, nasturtium, onion, parsley, and peppers. Avoid planting alongside Brassicas and dill. Corn will attract tomato pests, and kohlrabi will stunt tomatoes’ growth. Potatoes may spread blight to tomatoes, so keep them apart. Do no plant tomatoes near walnut trees.

    We Choose Optimism.

    West Coast Seeds is a family-owned company that embraces an organic lifestyle. A group of imagination catalysts and passionate educators, dedicated to producing products and services that better the environment. As part of our mission to repair the earth, we aim to inspire and empower people to take responsibility for the state of the planet. For us, organic is about much more than saying no to chemicals, it is about saying yes to building a healthy soil for the future.

    Our Guarantee.

    For over 35 years, we have upheld our strong reputation as a leading seed supplier, seeking out the highest quality untreated seeds for organic growing and putting them through rigorous independent testing. We built our company on the exchange of generational wisdom in a masterclass community of newbies and masters alike. Our world may have changed, but our commitment to our people, our customers, and our planet has not.

    Custodians of the Land.

    We’re a values-based business that has blossomed into a lifestyle ethos, with products that support seeders, feeders, keepers, and the tiniest of creepers. Our mission? To mobilize the next generation of gardeners with products that nourish soil and grow vigorous, sustainable gardens. We believe all plants should be grown without the use of chemicals, and that the seeds we supply are an important component of regenerative gardening.

    More than a Seed Company.

    We don’t just offer seeds, we offer experience, insight, and understanding. From timeless garden wisdom to new tech know-how, this is learning on the job: knowledge gleaned not from the pages of a book but from burying our fingers in the soil. We test, experiment, observe and adapt, never happier than when we get to share what we’ve learned with others.

    Think Big. Act Small.

    Gardens don’t just grow seeds. They grow minds and imaginations, people and communities. Our vision encompasses both the micro and the macro. We eat locally, protect pollinators, teach people to grow from seed, and support regional biodiversity. We think big but act small and deliver unexpected impact — always with community and purpose.

    Can You Dig It?

    At West Coast Seeds we believe in the power of small and that little can be large. Like the tiniest seed germinates to evoke incremental change with massive potential, so to can our community of gardeners and growers together. Gardeners are the earth’s stewards, planting seeds of creative declaration. The soil provides the canvas, we provide the seeds.

    How to Grow Early Season Tomatoes

    Step 1

    Timing

    Start indoors in early spring over bottom heat. When seedlings germinate, remove from the heat and grow under bright lights. Grow seedlings on for 6-8 weeks at around 10°C (50°F). Early season tomatoes can be planted out once night time temperatures are reliably above 7°C (45°F) - or later. Other types should be transplanted out when night time lows are 10°C (50°F) or warmer - or later. Optimal soil temperature for germination: 25-35°C (68-95°F). With bottom heat seeds should germinate in 7-14 days.

    Step 2

    Starting

    Sow seeds 5mm-1cm (¼-½”) deep. Keep seedlings under very bright light to prevent legginess. You may have to pot on seedlings more than once before they go out to allow for root growth. Space bush (determinate) transplants 45-60cm (18-24″) apart and vine (indeterminate) types 50-75cm (20-30″) apart in rows 1m (3′) apart.

    Step 3

    Growing

    Tomatoes like fertile, well drained soil that is rich in organic matter. Dig in finished compost and manure, and add 1 cup balanced organic fertilizer beneath each transplant. The nutrition from heavy clay soils is excellent for tomatoes, but they are slow to warm, so transplanting should be done later. By the same token, lighter soils warm more quickly, so transplants can go out sooner. Adding glacial rock dust will supply all the calcium they will need. Regular watering is vital, but don’t let the plants sit in water. Tomatoes are tropical plants so they require full sun and lots of heat. Vine varieties will require some kind of support such as a wire to grow up, or a trellis to be tied to as the plant grows. Bush types benefit from the support of a tomato cage in order to prevent sprawling. At the time of final transplant, plants can be buried up to their first pair of true leaves. This will encourage greater root growth, helping with both nutrient uptake and the plants’ ability to stand up to dry conditions.
    Stop watering around the end of July to encourage the fruit to ripen. If tomato plants are grown under cover, you can encourage pollination and fruit set by tapping the stem from time to time. Tomatoes do not rely on insects for pollination. Vibrating the plant shakes pollen loose within the flowers, which then self-pollinate.

    Indeterminate tomatoes continue to grow and produce fruit until they are killed by frost. Remove any suckers (stems growing from the crotch of leaves) to keep the foliage under control, and they will set a later crop of larger fruit. Determinate varieties normally set fruit in a concentrated time period. Their suckers are not normally removed, though some trimming helps with ventilation.

    Step 4

    Germination

    Days to Maturity: From transplant date.

    At least 75% of seeds will germinate in optimal conditions. Usual seed life: 3 years.

    Step 5

    Harvest

    Harvest when the fruit is the desired colour. Green tomatoes can be ripened indoors at a cool temperature when they are blemish free. Very dark green tomatoes are unlikely to ripen fully.

    Tomato mountai magic

    This variety is known for its high yield, meaning that you can expect to harvest a large number of tomatoes from each plant. This makes it an excellent choice for gardeners who want to be able to share their harvest with friends and family or preserve tomatoes for future use. When it comes to growing Tomato Mountain Magic, it is recommended to start the seeds indoors about six to eight weeks before the last expected frost date. This will give the plants a head start and allow them to establish strong roots before being transplanted outside. Once the danger of frost has passed, the plants can be moved to their permanent location in the garden or containers. Tomato Mountain Magic plants prefer full sun and well-drained soil. Regular watering is essential to keep the plants healthy and productive. It is also important to provide support, such as stakes or cages, to help the plants grow upright and prevent the branches from breaking under the weight of the tomatoes. Overall, Tomato Mountain Magic is an excellent choice for gardeners who want to grow flavorful tomatoes with high yields. Its adaptability, exceptional taste, and productivity make it a popular variety among both beginner and experienced gardeners. Whether eaten fresh or used in various dishes, Tomato Mountain Magic is sure to impress with its delicious flavor..

    Reviews for "Tomato Mountain Magic: Tomato-Based Remedies for Common Ailments"

    1. Sara - 2/5 stars
    I was really disappointed with "Tomato Mountain Magic". I had heard great things about it, but when I finally watched it, I found it to be quite dull. The plot was slow and lacked excitement, making it difficult for me to stay engaged. Additionally, the acting felt forced and unnatural, which further hindered my enjoyment of the film. Overall, I couldn't connect with the characters or the story, and I would not recommend it.
    2. John - 1/5 stars
    I cannot express how much I disliked "Tomato Mountain Magic". The storyline was confusing and incoherent, leaving me with more questions than answers. The dialogue was cheesy and felt incredibly forced, making the whole viewing experience cringe-worthy. The special effects were poorly executed, and at times, downright laughable. I regret wasting my time watching this film, and I would caution others to avoid it at all costs.
    3. Emma - 2/5 stars
    "Tomato Mountain Magic" was a huge letdown for me. The premise seemed interesting, but the execution was lacking. The pacing was incredibly slow, and some scenes felt unnecessarily long and dragged out. Furthermore, the character development was weak, and I found it hard to empathize or connect with any of them. The ending was unsatisfying and left me feeling underwhelmed. I was really hoping to enjoy this film, but unfortunately, it fell short of my expectations.
    4. David - 3/5 stars
    While "Tomato Mountain Magic" had some potential, it ultimately failed to deliver. The performances were decent, but the script felt lackluster and predictable. The plot lacked depth and originality, and I found myself losing interest halfway through the film. The cinematography and visuals were impressive, but it wasn't enough to salvage the overall experience. I wouldn't go out of my way to watch this film again, but it was okay for a one-time viewing.
    5. Michelle - 2/5 stars
    I had high hopes for "Tomato Mountain Magic", but it fell flat for me. The story felt disjointed and confusing, with underdeveloped characters that I struggled to connect with. The pacing was slow, which made the film drag on, and there were several unnecessary scenes that added little to the overall plot. The film had potential, but it lacked the magic and intrigue that I was expecting. I wouldn't recommend it unless you're a die-hard fan of the genre.

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