This very early Siberian variety, one of the most highly valued, produces trusses of 3-4 round, bright red fruits weighing 60-90 g, with dense, firm flesh.
Maturity: early.
Weight: 60-90 g.
Shape: round.
Texture: meaty.
Growth Type: determinate.
Color: red.
Foliage: regular.
History: This variety originates from Krasnoyarsk in Siberia. A Romanian variety with the same name was introduced to the Prague Seed Bank collection in 1955.

* The plants are very vigorous, the leaves are green, but there are no fruits?
Intensive plant growth, dark leaf color, thick stems, curled leaves, and the absence of fruits are signs of excess nitrogen nutrition, the so-called "fattening" (vegetative overgrowth) of the tomato. Most often, this is observed with an excessive application of organic fertilizers to the crop.
* The plant has begun to wilt, dry out, and the leaves are drooping?
These are signs of root rot. This quite often happens when tomatoes are planted in the same place for several consecutive years or when returned to that spot too early (lack of crop rotation).
* The leaves are covered with yellow spots, the top is very thin, the leaves are like threads, the fruits are small and deformed, and the flowers are fasciated (megablooms)?
This is what plants infected with the tobacco mosaic virus (or cucumber mosaic virus) look like. Such plants must be carefully and completely removed and destroyed. After that, tools should be treated with a weak solution of potassium permanganate.
To avoid the virus, resistant varieties and hybrids should be used.

