Hello everyone, I am a fairly novice gardener for things other than tomatoes and chillies! For the first time last year I tried to grow butternut squash... I had one huge squash.. and all of the others withered and died when they got to about an inch long... I had this a few years ago also with a pumpkin. I have set another plant this weekend. So would like to avoid this happening again if possible. Any ideas/advice? (or just a reason why this would happen). Many thanks
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Sounds like a pollination problem - what I sometimes do is pick off a male flower and use it to make sure all the female ones which are ready are pollinated by touching the relevant bits together. Temperature can be a factor too in pollination, so may be as we had a very hot summer last year that also didn't help.
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Hi Grow Bag - welcome back
Maybe the little ones weren't pollinated? Grow a few plants and help them along by "introducing" the male flowers to the females. I'll leave the process to your imagination.
Snap Nick.Last edited by veggiechicken; 23-04-2019, 12:09 PM.
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Originally posted by nickdub View PostSounds like a pollination problem - what I sometimes do is pick off a male flower and use it to make sure all the female ones which are ready are pollinated by touching the relevant bits together. Temperature can be a factor too in pollination, so may be as we had a very hot summer last year that also didn't help.
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Originally posted by Bex2012 View PostLast year was terrible for pumpkins and squashes, I planted 12 plants for our allotment sale day and was lucky if I got six fruit, it was just too hot and all the plants produced up until September was male flowers.
May be pollination improves if several varieties are grown. I did water them whenever I saw the leaves flagging - and had stuck canes in where they were planted so I could locate them with the hosepipe.
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