I know about hybrids, they don't breed true. Last year, I had a bumper harvest of a University of Hawaii developed Roma tomato hybrid. I saved some seeds and grew them in 5 gallon wicking buckets, but they did not have the same vigor and I got only a handful of small cherry size Roma looking tomatoes.@CNJ, If you want to save tomato seed, heirlooms, or open pollinated ("OP") are the way to go. That means they aren't hybrid and will breed true. You probably knew this, but just in case...
I rarely buy seed from a store anymore. Sometimes from a garden center, rarely from the grocery store or big box.
Here are the places I buy from, in no particular order:
Baker Creek
Sow True Seed
Seed Savers Exchange
Tomato Fest
Maine Potato Lady (for seed potatoes and onion sets)
Johnny seeds charged me $7 for shipping, but Organic America Seed Co
on Etsy has free shipping, so that's my go to for now. However, I don't know if their seeds will sprout yet............I had a bad experience with Johnny seeds, they sold me a packet of bad Red Romaine seeds with $7 shipping.
Burpee and Park Seed on Amazon did not disappoint me yet. The seeds I got from them grew. Park seed's come in a water tight aluminum packet, so they may last longer than the paper packet seeds from Burpee.
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