Hello,
i grew Crimson Crush F1 last year and was amazed by its performance, both in blight resistance and especially vigour.
I never before had any outdoor tomatoes that grew so well and ripened fruit.
So following in the footsteps of great people i don't need to mention i set about trying to dehybridise the hybrid.
I had 10 tomato plants sown from seed of the crimson crush in total.
7 rotted away just like tomatoes do here in general, but 3 plants withstood and are making fruit.
Now keep in mind here that we are talking about pacific northwest climate with, just recently, 2 weeks of rain almost every day and temperatures rarely exceeding 68F -20C
for all you american folks (i live in brittany, france)
These 3 tomato plants, while not being completely unscathed, show a remarkable resistance to mildew and an amazing genetic diversity.
The fact of trying to obtain an open-pollinated mildew resistant variety of tomatoes from the crimson crush f1 hybrid represents no trouble, but rather a great joy and satisfaction to my mind, in case you were wondering, for i believe that nature,plants and genetic heritage belongs to all humanity.
While they may well
sell their precious creation, which contains ph1 and ph2 resistant genes thank you very much, we can toy around with the seeds offspring.
-large orange tomato, a bit weirdly shaped, slight mildew but ripening
-well-sized round tomato, not ripe yet, very little mildew
-small sized tomato, not ripe yet, no signs of mildew