What variety is this tomato with long, milky green branches?












3















I planted black krim tomato seeds and one of them came out like this:



unidentified tomato



Picture of flowerCloser view of stem



Other black krim plants are very different. This has rounded leaves, long branches and is somehow milky green color. Does anyone know what it could be? Thank you!










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Buldozer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • do you know what the fruit looks like?

    – black thumb
    Apr 6 at 4:12











  • I do not know the shape of a fruit but here is a picture of flowers: imgur.com/a/KL1OP19

    – Buldozer
    Apr 6 at 14:30








  • 2





    Welcome Bulldozer! Thanks for this great question! I changed the title because identification questions need as many details as possible to get good answers. I also brought your pictures in from off-site so they're all visible here. We hope to see you often!

    – Sue
    Apr 6 at 15:58













  • @Sue Thank you very much! I see there is a great community here. I hope to provide some good answers in the future too even though I am more of a novice gardener.

    – Buldozer
    Apr 6 at 17:03
















3















I planted black krim tomato seeds and one of them came out like this:



unidentified tomato



Picture of flowerCloser view of stem



Other black krim plants are very different. This has rounded leaves, long branches and is somehow milky green color. Does anyone know what it could be? Thank you!










share|improve this question









New contributor




Buldozer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • do you know what the fruit looks like?

    – black thumb
    Apr 6 at 4:12











  • I do not know the shape of a fruit but here is a picture of flowers: imgur.com/a/KL1OP19

    – Buldozer
    Apr 6 at 14:30








  • 2





    Welcome Bulldozer! Thanks for this great question! I changed the title because identification questions need as many details as possible to get good answers. I also brought your pictures in from off-site so they're all visible here. We hope to see you often!

    – Sue
    Apr 6 at 15:58













  • @Sue Thank you very much! I see there is a great community here. I hope to provide some good answers in the future too even though I am more of a novice gardener.

    – Buldozer
    Apr 6 at 17:03














3












3








3








I planted black krim tomato seeds and one of them came out like this:



unidentified tomato



Picture of flowerCloser view of stem



Other black krim plants are very different. This has rounded leaves, long branches and is somehow milky green color. Does anyone know what it could be? Thank you!










share|improve this question









New contributor




Buldozer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I planted black krim tomato seeds and one of them came out like this:



unidentified tomato



Picture of flowerCloser view of stem



Other black krim plants are very different. This has rounded leaves, long branches and is somehow milky green color. Does anyone know what it could be? Thank you!







identification tomatoes






share|improve this question









New contributor




Buldozer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Buldozer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 6 at 15:59









Sue

4,66032259




4,66032259






New contributor




Buldozer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked Apr 5 at 23:22









BuldozerBuldozer

264




264




New contributor




Buldozer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Buldozer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Buldozer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • do you know what the fruit looks like?

    – black thumb
    Apr 6 at 4:12











  • I do not know the shape of a fruit but here is a picture of flowers: imgur.com/a/KL1OP19

    – Buldozer
    Apr 6 at 14:30








  • 2





    Welcome Bulldozer! Thanks for this great question! I changed the title because identification questions need as many details as possible to get good answers. I also brought your pictures in from off-site so they're all visible here. We hope to see you often!

    – Sue
    Apr 6 at 15:58













  • @Sue Thank you very much! I see there is a great community here. I hope to provide some good answers in the future too even though I am more of a novice gardener.

    – Buldozer
    Apr 6 at 17:03



















  • do you know what the fruit looks like?

    – black thumb
    Apr 6 at 4:12











  • I do not know the shape of a fruit but here is a picture of flowers: imgur.com/a/KL1OP19

    – Buldozer
    Apr 6 at 14:30








  • 2





    Welcome Bulldozer! Thanks for this great question! I changed the title because identification questions need as many details as possible to get good answers. I also brought your pictures in from off-site so they're all visible here. We hope to see you often!

    – Sue
    Apr 6 at 15:58













  • @Sue Thank you very much! I see there is a great community here. I hope to provide some good answers in the future too even though I am more of a novice gardener.

    – Buldozer
    Apr 6 at 17:03

















do you know what the fruit looks like?

– black thumb
Apr 6 at 4:12





do you know what the fruit looks like?

– black thumb
Apr 6 at 4:12













I do not know the shape of a fruit but here is a picture of flowers: imgur.com/a/KL1OP19

– Buldozer
Apr 6 at 14:30







I do not know the shape of a fruit but here is a picture of flowers: imgur.com/a/KL1OP19

– Buldozer
Apr 6 at 14:30






2




2





Welcome Bulldozer! Thanks for this great question! I changed the title because identification questions need as many details as possible to get good answers. I also brought your pictures in from off-site so they're all visible here. We hope to see you often!

– Sue
Apr 6 at 15:58







Welcome Bulldozer! Thanks for this great question! I changed the title because identification questions need as many details as possible to get good answers. I also brought your pictures in from off-site so they're all visible here. We hope to see you often!

– Sue
Apr 6 at 15:58















@Sue Thank you very much! I see there is a great community here. I hope to provide some good answers in the future too even though I am more of a novice gardener.

– Buldozer
Apr 6 at 17:03





@Sue Thank you very much! I see there is a great community here. I hope to provide some good answers in the future too even though I am more of a novice gardener.

– Buldozer
Apr 6 at 17:03










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















8














I'm afraid with over 20k tomato breeds and striking similarities among many of them (with crosses people possible), there's not enough information for others to know what kind of tomato this is. Even if it had fruit that looked just like a particular breed's fruit, it would be a guess at best.



If the seeds were all supposed to be from Black Krim, then it's possible that one of them (or else all the others) were cross-pollinated, or that both groups were crossed by different tomatoes. It's also possible that it's a mutant.



It's also possibly a stray seed from another kind of tomato, which may have been mixed up with the Black Krim seeds.






share|improve this answer
























  • I believe it is a stray seed because it is quite different form black krim. I even suspect it could be a determinate variety since it is more stocky with longer branches. It also bruises dark green if I touch the stem; imgur.com/TsDcu8C

    – Buldozer
    Apr 6 at 14:41



















3














I think it has no variety/breed.



It looks very similar to "normal tomatoes". I think the seeds originated from cross pollination from other varieties. So it is an hybrid, but not stabilized. So we cannot classify at any variety.



"Normal tomatoes": such hybrids tend to have more the dominant genes, so they tend to look like normal tomatoes (smaller fruits). You may get a new variety, but it is not probable.



I have many of such "normal tomatoes": I but different varieties, but bees will cross-pollinate the varieties. Next year many plants will grow up (and I keep on a corner of my garden). It is incredible how "common" they will become. Parents are not recognizable.






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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    8














    I'm afraid with over 20k tomato breeds and striking similarities among many of them (with crosses people possible), there's not enough information for others to know what kind of tomato this is. Even if it had fruit that looked just like a particular breed's fruit, it would be a guess at best.



    If the seeds were all supposed to be from Black Krim, then it's possible that one of them (or else all the others) were cross-pollinated, or that both groups were crossed by different tomatoes. It's also possible that it's a mutant.



    It's also possibly a stray seed from another kind of tomato, which may have been mixed up with the Black Krim seeds.






    share|improve this answer
























    • I believe it is a stray seed because it is quite different form black krim. I even suspect it could be a determinate variety since it is more stocky with longer branches. It also bruises dark green if I touch the stem; imgur.com/TsDcu8C

      – Buldozer
      Apr 6 at 14:41
















    8














    I'm afraid with over 20k tomato breeds and striking similarities among many of them (with crosses people possible), there's not enough information for others to know what kind of tomato this is. Even if it had fruit that looked just like a particular breed's fruit, it would be a guess at best.



    If the seeds were all supposed to be from Black Krim, then it's possible that one of them (or else all the others) were cross-pollinated, or that both groups were crossed by different tomatoes. It's also possible that it's a mutant.



    It's also possibly a stray seed from another kind of tomato, which may have been mixed up with the Black Krim seeds.






    share|improve this answer
























    • I believe it is a stray seed because it is quite different form black krim. I even suspect it could be a determinate variety since it is more stocky with longer branches. It also bruises dark green if I touch the stem; imgur.com/TsDcu8C

      – Buldozer
      Apr 6 at 14:41














    8












    8








    8







    I'm afraid with over 20k tomato breeds and striking similarities among many of them (with crosses people possible), there's not enough information for others to know what kind of tomato this is. Even if it had fruit that looked just like a particular breed's fruit, it would be a guess at best.



    If the seeds were all supposed to be from Black Krim, then it's possible that one of them (or else all the others) were cross-pollinated, or that both groups were crossed by different tomatoes. It's also possible that it's a mutant.



    It's also possibly a stray seed from another kind of tomato, which may have been mixed up with the Black Krim seeds.






    share|improve this answer













    I'm afraid with over 20k tomato breeds and striking similarities among many of them (with crosses people possible), there's not enough information for others to know what kind of tomato this is. Even if it had fruit that looked just like a particular breed's fruit, it would be a guess at best.



    If the seeds were all supposed to be from Black Krim, then it's possible that one of them (or else all the others) were cross-pollinated, or that both groups were crossed by different tomatoes. It's also possible that it's a mutant.



    It's also possibly a stray seed from another kind of tomato, which may have been mixed up with the Black Krim seeds.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Apr 6 at 4:22









    ShuleShule

    13k21646




    13k21646













    • I believe it is a stray seed because it is quite different form black krim. I even suspect it could be a determinate variety since it is more stocky with longer branches. It also bruises dark green if I touch the stem; imgur.com/TsDcu8C

      – Buldozer
      Apr 6 at 14:41



















    • I believe it is a stray seed because it is quite different form black krim. I even suspect it could be a determinate variety since it is more stocky with longer branches. It also bruises dark green if I touch the stem; imgur.com/TsDcu8C

      – Buldozer
      Apr 6 at 14:41

















    I believe it is a stray seed because it is quite different form black krim. I even suspect it could be a determinate variety since it is more stocky with longer branches. It also bruises dark green if I touch the stem; imgur.com/TsDcu8C

    – Buldozer
    Apr 6 at 14:41





    I believe it is a stray seed because it is quite different form black krim. I even suspect it could be a determinate variety since it is more stocky with longer branches. It also bruises dark green if I touch the stem; imgur.com/TsDcu8C

    – Buldozer
    Apr 6 at 14:41











    3














    I think it has no variety/breed.



    It looks very similar to "normal tomatoes". I think the seeds originated from cross pollination from other varieties. So it is an hybrid, but not stabilized. So we cannot classify at any variety.



    "Normal tomatoes": such hybrids tend to have more the dominant genes, so they tend to look like normal tomatoes (smaller fruits). You may get a new variety, but it is not probable.



    I have many of such "normal tomatoes": I but different varieties, but bees will cross-pollinate the varieties. Next year many plants will grow up (and I keep on a corner of my garden). It is incredible how "common" they will become. Parents are not recognizable.






    share|improve this answer




























      3














      I think it has no variety/breed.



      It looks very similar to "normal tomatoes". I think the seeds originated from cross pollination from other varieties. So it is an hybrid, but not stabilized. So we cannot classify at any variety.



      "Normal tomatoes": such hybrids tend to have more the dominant genes, so they tend to look like normal tomatoes (smaller fruits). You may get a new variety, but it is not probable.



      I have many of such "normal tomatoes": I but different varieties, but bees will cross-pollinate the varieties. Next year many plants will grow up (and I keep on a corner of my garden). It is incredible how "common" they will become. Parents are not recognizable.






      share|improve this answer


























        3












        3








        3







        I think it has no variety/breed.



        It looks very similar to "normal tomatoes". I think the seeds originated from cross pollination from other varieties. So it is an hybrid, but not stabilized. So we cannot classify at any variety.



        "Normal tomatoes": such hybrids tend to have more the dominant genes, so they tend to look like normal tomatoes (smaller fruits). You may get a new variety, but it is not probable.



        I have many of such "normal tomatoes": I but different varieties, but bees will cross-pollinate the varieties. Next year many plants will grow up (and I keep on a corner of my garden). It is incredible how "common" they will become. Parents are not recognizable.






        share|improve this answer













        I think it has no variety/breed.



        It looks very similar to "normal tomatoes". I think the seeds originated from cross pollination from other varieties. So it is an hybrid, but not stabilized. So we cannot classify at any variety.



        "Normal tomatoes": such hybrids tend to have more the dominant genes, so they tend to look like normal tomatoes (smaller fruits). You may get a new variety, but it is not probable.



        I have many of such "normal tomatoes": I but different varieties, but bees will cross-pollinate the varieties. Next year many plants will grow up (and I keep on a corner of my garden). It is incredible how "common" they will become. Parents are not recognizable.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Apr 6 at 17:06









        Giacomo CatenazziGiacomo Catenazzi

        11.9k31041




        11.9k31041






















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