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2.8 out of 5 stars. 10 reviews

Bonnie Plants 19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant

2.810 Reviews

Item # 135770299

Image showing  19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant
Image showing  19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant
Image showing  19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant
Image showing  19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant
Image showing  19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant
Image showing  19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant
$4.98
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Bonnie Plants 19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant

2.810 Reviews

Item # 135770299

Image showing  19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant
Image showing  19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant
Image showing  19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant
Image showing  19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant
Image showing  19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant
Image showing  19.3 oz. Potted Organic Better Bush Tomato Plant
$4.98

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Perfect for pots and small spaces, Better Bush produces lots of medium-sized red tomatoes with excellent flavor. The plant is stocky and strong, and only grows 3 to 5 feet tall. Tomatoes are versatile, providing tasty slices for caprese salad, BLTs, and tomato pie. Fruits are shielded from sunburn by heavy foliage. For best results, use a cage or stake for support.

  • Bonnie Organics Plants, certified as USDA organic, gives you a head start to an organic garden for your family
  • A compact vine with fruits just the right size for slicing
  • Great for container growing
  • Determinate, meaning it stops growing at a certain height, plus ripens most of its fruit within a short period of time
  • Heavy foliage helps against sunburn
  • Light Requirement: Full sun
  • Spacing: 24" to 36" apart

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1 review with 4 stars.
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4 reviews with 1 star.

Overall Rating

2.8
4 out of 9 (44%) reviewers recommend this product

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Review 1
Age65 or over
GenderMale

No tomatoes

a year ago
Bought plant late May. Planted in container. Got bloomsoms that died off and never got as single Tomato. Bought your grape tomatoes last year and had tomatoes until November

No, I do not recommend this product.

Originally posted on bonnieplants.com

Review 1
Age55 to 64
GenderFemale

Looks great, tastes like cardboard.

2 years ago
Tastes like a fake tomato bought in the grocery store. I’ve harvested two so far and although they look great they taste like wet cardboard. I threw them both in the compost. I’d bought the better bush by mistake as it was mixed in with some cherry tomatoes. I planted it as I’d never grown a Better Bush. Not sure why it’s so bad. The cherry plants are great and my other 16 tomato plants are fantastic but this one is seriously the worst home-grown summer tomato I’ve ever eaten.

No, I do not recommend this product.

Originally posted on bonnieplants.com

Review 1
Age25 to 34
GenderFemale

Not sweet, but not bad yeild

3 years ago
Just harvested my second to last batch, the tomatoes weren't as sweet as what I am used to, but not bad. Give that I live in zone 8 and didn't plant the baby until July, the yield was pretty good (about 20-30 tomatoes grown in containers). It flowered like crazy it didn't fruit until late September-October when the weather was cooled, so most flowers did not produce fruit before powdery mildew hit the plant. The lack of sweetness could be affected by the late planting time as well since there's not much sunlight. May give it another shot next year when I can start my garden earlier.

Yes, I recommend this product.

Originally posted on bonnieplants.com

Review 1
Age45 to 54
GenderFemale

We are hoping this year is better than last

3 years ago
We live in a condo, so we don't have a very big back yard..so last year we tried planting tomatoes and peppers in containers...we didn't have much luck with the tomatoes, but our peppers produced! We bought Bonnie tomato plants last year, they were a big fail..that was our first time using containers, so it could've been our own fault they didn't produce. So, this year we bought Bonnie plants again, and bought containers that are specifically for tomatoes...(Patio Pickers) This year we did more research on container gardens & planted them differently. We followed the directions that came with the Patio Pickers containers and used the exact products they recommened... Miracle-Gro potting "mix" (NOT soil), lime & Miracle-Gro plant food. So hopefully this year we have enough tomatoes to share with our family, friends and neighbors!! Fingers crossed!! I will post another review in a few months to share how our plants turned out. I added one photo, we have 3 containers just like this with Bonnie tomatoes.

Originally posted on bonnieplants.com