Can anyone tell me why I have all female flowers on my courgette plants?
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courgette flowers
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What variety are you growing?
I had this problem both last year and the year before. I was growing Tuscany. I had three plants, and all produced barely any male flowers at all, and as a result I had very few courgettes, because most of the female flowers didn't get pollinated.
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Originally posted by Jungle Jane View PostIt could be a variety that doesn’t need pollination,parthenocarpy lets the fruit develop without fertilisation?
Of course, if it is a parthenocarpic variety then the fact that it is not producing male flowers is not necessarily a problem, but it still doesn't answer the question as why it's doing so in the first place...
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I don't have any flowers yet the plants must be about three weeks in advance of a usual year so not really worried about that and when they start throwing flowers it will more than likely be male flowers firstit may be a struggle to reach the top, but once your over the hill your problems start.
Member of the Nutters Club but I think I am just there to make up the numbers
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Originally posted by Mr Bones View PostHa ha, only half a post again.... come on IT get your act together..
Was supposed to say 10 degrees then they'll produce female flowers too but maybe some varieties are different.
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I did wonder if they were a self pollinating variety but the courgette is remaining small. It hasn't grown any bigger for over a week. They sound very similar to Plot 70's pumpkin, the male flowers are all in tight bud at base of plants. I planted 6 seeds and all are the same, all in flower and all female.
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I don't know what to suggest, to be honest. I never did find a solution when I had that problem. They would throw out the odd male flower, and I tried to pollinate as many female flowers as I could whenever one appeared, but the female flowers still outnumbered the males by some 10 to 1 all summer.
One I can suggest would be to pick the courgettes just as the flower begins to die and eat them as baby courgettes (they'll only be about 3 inches or so long, but it's better than nothing, and picking small encourages more female flowers to grow more quickly).
Another option is to buy and sow more courgette seeds. I suspect this problem is varietal, so buy a different variety. You still have plenty to time to sow more courgette seeds for a crop this summer. You don't necessarily need to get rid of the current plants, either, as long as you have space, as you can use the new plants as pollen donors for the current plants.Last edited by ameno; 10-06-2020, 06:30 PM.
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