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Old 10-12-2004, 10:58 PM
Jim Marrs
 
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Yep ,

Thats a squash. Looks like flea bettle and/or spider mite damage to me.
Jem
"Pat Kiewicz" wrote in message
...
Jim Carlock said:

1) I think this is a squash type of plant on a vine. It has a good
sized flower, about 3 inches across.


Yep, squash...the enormous size of the flower in relation to the leaves
is pretty distinctive. (Pumpkins are just a name given to certain types
of squash.) That's a male flower in the picture.

2) The leaves have are spotted and look eaten. What might
be causing this? I don't see anything on the bottom of the
leaves.


It looks to me that something damaged the leaves (probably when they
were smaller). I'd suspect cucumber beetles, but it could have been
weather, animals, or slugs. Cucumber beetles and slugs are most active
at night and hide during the day. The beetles will usually hunker down in
the leaf buds, flowers, in the ground just under the vines and can go
unnoticed for quite a while before the population builds.

The spots look like a fungal disease, possibly downy mildew. (Check the
bottoms of the leaves; with downy mildew there will be a grayish moldy
spot corresponding to the yellowish spots on the top.) Descriptions of
various diseases of Cucurbits he

http://plantpathology.tamu.edu/Texla...upe/cants.html
http://plantpathology.tamu.edu/texla...lon/wmelon.htm


3) There are 4 of these growing in a small 6" top diameter
clay pot. They have a lemony smell or citric smell, but that
might be because there are some tangerine seeds nearby.
The smell seems to go with it, so I might have planted some
tangerine seeds but I can't seem to find what a 4" to 5" high
tangerine plant appears as. The picture below shows the
plants in question. They look like they might be too big for
that pot already...


Tomato plants, and yes, they'd like to be transplanted or potted
up or thinned at least.

--
Pat in Plymouth MI ('someplace.net' is comcast)

Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
(attributed to Don Marti)