My blue kuri plants are on their way out. Hopefully, I will get three fruit out of them...was looking to be loads more but, despite the abundance of male flowers, the female flowers have all been dying off. Not sure what to do differently next year... other than build a bigger frame and move somewhere a lot hotter. Ho hum.
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Help needed with my squash, please
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Zelenina, I bought Futsu seeds from MoreVeg. I've got two plants, one of which has conventional male and female flowers, but the other is a kind of mutant: it has flowers that grow like males on a long stalk, but inside it has both male and female flower parts and a gert big round thing (as we Bristolians might say) below them that isn't quite a proper female fruit but more than you'd expect to find in the base of a male flower. Very strange!
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Originally posted by Chris11 View PostThat's an interesting idea, adding chopped banana skins.
I add lots of banana skins to Dalek compost bins with the hope of upping the potassium levels, but I don't know how quickly the nutrients would be released if applied more directly. Might give this a try
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Originally posted by Jungle Jane View PostWill they eat apples? Seriously thinking though,I worry about what insects you might attract with them,maybe bury them away from flies & wasps? Would the kuri flowers pollinate the musquee flowers?
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Originally posted by Yasai View PostMy blue kuri plants are on their way out. Hopefully, I will get three fruit out of them...was looking to be loads more but, despite the abundance of male flowers, the female flowers have all been dying off. Not sure what to do differently next year... other than build a bigger frame and move somewhere a lot hotter. Ho hum.
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Somerset newbie, I sowed some Pumpkins in early April, planted out early May and they have produced to date 3 Pumpkins between 2 plants.
I bought a Crown Prince plant with 3 leaves at the Axminster show in the middle of June and that's got 3 bigger pumpkins growing despite being 2 months later AND the wet weather through July and August to date. It's a total triffid taking over my allotment.
Therefore my conclusion is the polar opposite to yours. The Crown prince was grown on a plot following First Earlies which had been given plenty of manure. I think that's the reason it has prospered.
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Originally posted by Snoop Puss View PostSquash... you do realise they're a gateway drug?
I have already been eyeing up some local allotments, but my girlfriend suggested that I could start out small - by mowing our lawn more often, say...Last edited by Somerset_newbie; 16-08-2017, 12:18 PM.
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Originally posted by Jonnyt View PostSomerset newbie, I sowed some Pumpkins in early April, planted out early May and they have produced to date 3 Pumpkins between 2 plants.
I bought a Crown Prince plant with 3 leaves at the Axminster show in the middle of June and that's got 3 bigger pumpkins growing despite being 2 months later AND the wet weather through July and August to date. It's a total triffid taking over my allotment.
Therefore my conclusion is the polar opposite to yours. The Crown prince was grown on a plot following First Earlies which had been given plenty of manure. I think that's the reason it has prospered.
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Originally posted by Somerset_newbie View PostOr use tyres maybe, like this chap: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KRdjiuIgrtE&t=861s. I'm spending far too much time watching Youtube vids and looking at different trellising ideas. And I did 0 gardening up until two months ago...
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Originally posted by Somerset_newbie View PostMaybe my musquees are just lazy then? It surely can't be the soil if my red kuri is busy producing flowers and fruit.
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Originally posted by Yasai View PostThanks for the link. Yes, YouTube gardening videos can be very addictive. Just skimmed my way through the numerous videos this guy has made about his pumpkins. The biggest problem I have with squash plants is that they always succumb to powdery mildew, which is what is killing them off now by the looks of things. Am already looking forward to having another go next year...
I hear you on looking forward to next year, I'm already drawing up a shortlist of what I want to grow. If only our garden was 3-4 times as big...
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