Tom Thumb Pea is a compact, heirloom cultivar of Pisum sativum that grows just 12 inches tall, making it one of the easiest peas to grow without staking or trellising. Developed and preserved by Thelma Sanders of Missouri since 1920, this open-pollinated variety produces full-sized, sweet green peas with classic flavor despite its diminutive stature. Hardy from zones 1 to 9, it matures in just 55 days and thrives in containers, raised beds, and garden plots alike. With natural resistance to powdery mildew and a naturally upright growth habit, Tom Thumb removes the guesswork from pea growing.
Full Sun
—
1-9
12in H x 2in W
Annual
Moderate
Hover over chart points for details
This pea's real story is its survival. Thelma Sanders kept Tom Thumb alive for over a century when it might have vanished entirely, and its compact 12-inch frame means you can grow it anywhere, from a tiny patio pot to a sprawling garden bed. The full-sized pods and tender, sweet peas belie its modest size, proving that good things come in small packages. It needs no staking, no fussing, and no special tricks, just soil, sun, and water.
Tom Thumb Peas are eaten fresh from the pod or shelled for the tender green peas inside. The full-sized pods belie the plant's small stature, making it excellent for fresh eating, light cooking, and adding to spring salads and stir-fries. Its compact nature and container-friendliness mean home gardeners can grow restaurant-quality peas on a patio or in a small raised bed.
Sow Tom Thumb Pea seeds directly into the garden as soon as soil is workable in spring. Plant when soil temperature reaches 45°F or higher. Seeds germinate best between 45 and 75°F, so early spring and fall sowings both work well. Because this variety is frost-tolerant, early spring planting is ideal for a quick, dependable crop.
Harvest Tom Thumb Pea pods when they are full and plump but still bright green, typically 55 days after sowing. Pick pods regularly to encourage continued flowering and production; leaving mature pods on the vine signals the plant to slow production. Snap or cut pods from the vine by hand, working gently to avoid damaging the delicate stems.
Enter your ZIP code to see a personalized growing calendar for this plant.
“Tom Thumb Pea owes its existence to one gardener's dedication. Thelma Sanders of Missouri preserved this heirloom variety from 1920 onward, saving it from extinction when smaller pea varieties fell out of favor with commercial growers. Her stewardship ensured that gardeners today can still grow the same compact, productive peas her family tended for generations. The variety carries within it a century of garden history, a living link to mid-20th-century American seed saving.”