It already is growing… whether it produces any meaningful fruit however, no way to know.
princessbubbbles
It probably will. If you want, you can remove more ungerminated seeds from that tomato and start those too as backup. They’ll need a lot of light.
Rollercoaster671
Store bought tomatoes are always hybrids meaning they won’t necessarily produce the same fruit as they were grown from. Could be good, could be bad
Vast-Combination4046
Get indoor potting soil and seed trays or nursery pots. If you see this becoming a hobby target has reusable ones.
Cut the tomato plant out with a knife and take as many roots as possible. Don’t put too much stock in flavor because it could have any number of genetic variants from cross pollination.
The-Tradition
Bury the tomato in a pot with just the seedling poking out?
5 Comments
It already is growing… whether it produces any meaningful fruit however, no way to know.
It probably will. If you want, you can remove more ungerminated seeds from that tomato and start those too as backup. They’ll need a lot of light.
Store bought tomatoes are always hybrids meaning they won’t necessarily produce the same fruit as they were grown from. Could be good, could be bad
Get indoor potting soil and seed trays or nursery pots. If you see this becoming a hobby target has reusable ones.
Cut the tomato plant out with a knife and take as many roots as possible. Don’t put too much stock in flavor because it could have any number of genetic variants from cross pollination.
Bury the tomato in a pot with just the seedling poking out?
This is probably how nature intended it to work.