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Old February 11, 2016   #16
pauldavid
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I like the ones with a family name. I like the history, embellished or not. I like the commercial heirlooms because they usually have a well documented history but I also like the unusual such as: Vorlon, Girl Girl's Weird Thing, Spudakee, Spudatula, Grub's Mystery Green, Not Purple Strawberry, etc. Gives a sense of mystery. I guess that I like them all.
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Old February 11, 2016   #17
sjamesNorway
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Faworyt
Malakhitovaya Shkatulka
Maya and Sion’s Airdrie Classic
Ten Hung Tan Chieh
Cosmonaut Volkov
Sakharnyi Pudovichok
Dwarf Blazing Beauty
Seek No Further Love Apple
Rebel Yell
Cowlick's Brandywine
Druzba
Pink Berkeley Tie-Die
Crnkovic Yugoslavian
Couilles de Taureau
Grightmire’s Pride
Neves Azorean Red
Fish Lake Oxheart
Napoli a Fiaschetto
Rosa de Somontano
George Detsikas Italian Red
German Johnson, Benton’s Strain

Aren't all these names great? There's a whole world of varieties out there. I wouldn’t choose them just because of the names, though. They all come with recommendations from people here at Tomatoville. Just knowing that I'll have tiny seeds for all of these (many with the help of friends here), and can grow them into large plants yielding delicious tomatoes, is wonderful to look forward to.

Steve
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Old February 11, 2016   #18
PureHarvest
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See: The Lego movie
An absolute yes the name is key.
Plus people love to name drop in all aspects of life.
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Old February 11, 2016   #19
ginger2778
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Sinister Minister
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Old February 11, 2016   #20
natural
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My best selling tomato plant every year is Dolly Parton.
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Old February 11, 2016   #21
pauldavid
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Quote:
Originally Posted by natural View Post
My best selling tomato plant every year is Dolly Parton.
I haven't heard of that one before. Now that's a name to live up to.
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Old February 11, 2016   #22
travis
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Two comments ...

Ginger, thank you for inserting the apostrophe into Girl Girl's Weird Thing. I see it typed without the apostrophe more often that with, and it just doesn't make as much sense (Girl Girls Weird Thing ... when I read it too quickly, read that as Girls Girls, Weird Things). Who is Girl Girl anyway? I never figured that one out.

Now, as to The Thong. I think I remember that name coming from an incident where a particular tomato discussion board member had to remove her flip flop (not her "thong" thank goodness) to swat a apider or an insect that was crawling across her tractor steering wheel ... if remember the story correctly.

The story this lady told online was so hilarious that subsequently someone memorialized it by naming a tomato The Thong.

Last edited by travis; February 11, 2016 at 11:03 AM.
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Old February 11, 2016   #23
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Girl Girl is a dog that found the tomato.
Worth
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Old February 11, 2016   #24
joseph
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I prefer pragmatic names. So "Red Tomato #37" works really well for me. It tells me something about the phenotype of the tomato which I value more than a pedigree. "Small Red Tomato #37" would work even better for me. "Small Red Pear Tomato #37" is really getting me excited.

I don't care much about history, or pedigrees, or nostalgia. I care about how a variety grew last year in my garden... If a new variety grew well enough in my garden for me to save seed from it, then I am going to rename it anyway. "Early Girl F1" is likely to become "Red Determinate Saladette" after I save seeds from it. Descendants of Sungold eventually became Sun-1, Sun-4, "Sun-Frost Tolerant", etc...
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Old February 11, 2016   #25
Tormato
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rhines81 View Post
Just going to throw this out there ....

What's in a name and do you really think people love a certain tomato on the namesake alone?

For example: Assuming all parameters (taste, growth, etc...) are the same, would you rather grow a variety called "Psycho Starship Zinger" or a variety named "Red Tomato #37" ???
Sometimes when I name a tomato, ing that tomato doesn't come into play.

Elbonian Mud Ball
Ursa Major Disappointment
Wretched Heart
etc...

I'm working on Soylent Blue, too.
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Old February 11, 2016   #26
heirloomtomaguy
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Quote:
Originally Posted by travis View Post
Two comments ...

Ginger, thank you for inserting the apostrophe into Girl Girl's Weird Thing. I see it typed without the apostrophe more often that with, and it just doesn't make as much sense (Girl Girls Weird Thing ... when I read it too quickly, read that as Girls Girls, Weird Things). Who is Girl Girl anyway? I never figured that one out.

Now, as to The Thong. I think I remember that name coming from an incident where a particular tomato discussion board member had to remove her flip flop (not her "thong" thank goodness) to swat a apider or an insect that was crawling across her tractor steering wheel ... if remember the story correctly.

The story this lady told online was so hilarious that subsequently someone memorialized it by naming a tomato The Thong.
Thanks Travis for some info on "The Thong". I always wondered how it got such a name.
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“Enter by the narrow gate; for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leads to destruction, and there are many who go in by it. Because narrow is the gate and difficult is the way which leads to life, and there are few who find it."
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Old February 11, 2016   #27
rhines81
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Quote:
Originally Posted by joseph View Post
I prefer pragmatic names. So "Red Tomato #37" works really well for me. It tells me something about the phenotype of the tomato which I value more than a pedigree. "Small Red Tomato #37" would work even better for me. "Small Red Pear Tomato #37" is really getting me excited.

I don't care much about history, or pedigrees, or nostalgia. I care about how a variety grew last year in my garden... If a new variety grew well enough in my garden for me to save seed from it, then I am going to rename it anyway. "Early Girl F1" is likely to become "Red Determinate Saladette" after I save seeds from it. Descendants of Sungold eventually became Sun-1, Sun-4, "Sun-Frost Tolerant", etc...
Thank you Joseph, I always know there are practical people out there somewhere. Just because a tomato's name has a story around it does not make it productive or tasty. I'd prefer a descriptive name of what I was growing. I guess the numbering system would be better replaced with more adjectives. "Early Season Productive Frost Tolerant Delicious Black Cherry Tomatoes"
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Old February 12, 2016   #28
joseph
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I just pulled out my tomato seeds to look at the names. Here's some of my favorites.

Very Early Fern-Leaved Determinate Slicer
Little Long-Keeper Productive Bland Cardboard-like Determinate Paste
Very Late Indeterminate Hillbilly Not Blemished With Spots
Great Tasting Wild Cross Orange Cherry Indeterminate
Wild Cross Dwarf
Frost Tolerant Current
DXX-M
HX-9
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Old February 12, 2016   #29
NarnianGarden
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Quote:
Originally Posted by joseph View Post
Little Long-Keeper Productive Bland Cardboard-like Determinate Paste
This!
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Old February 12, 2016   #30
kath
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Quote:
Originally Posted by joseph View Post
I just pulled out my tomato seeds to look at the names. Here's some of my favorites.

Very Early Fern-Leaved Determinate Slicer
Little Long-Keeper Productive Bland Cardboard-like Determinate Paste
Very Late Indeterminate Hillbilly Not Blemished With Spots
Great Tasting Wild Cross Orange Cherry Indeterminate
Wild Cross Dwarf
Frost Tolerant Current
Very practical, yet amusing!
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