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Butzmark 17-09-2005 11:44 PM

Late season watermelon
 
This year my watermelons are thriving late in the season. I
suppose it's the varieties. I've never grown these before. I've got
yellow doll and orange sunshine seedless. I highly recommend both. The
yellow doll does fine for a pollinator and produces a great melon. I'm
in Ohio, zone 5. The quality seems to have diminished in the fall
picked melons. It's grainier, and the yellow and orange flesh,
respectively is not as bright. I picked when the tendril by the fruit
dried up, summer and fall. I think the leaf cover is not as heavy. Any
ideas why, and if there's anything I could do differently if I get a
long season next year?


Dwayne 18-09-2005 01:30 PM

1. I plant mine indoors a month before time to plant them outside. Any
longer than that and the tap root gets confused, doesn't do its job and you
have to water them all the time.

2. Don't put them outside until the temp is going to stay around or above,
60 all the time. Cold weather stunts the watermelon plants growth and sets
it back for a couple of weeks.

I have seen nothing in writing about the first of these recommendations, but
it has been my experience that both are true.

Dwayne
"Butzmark" wrote in message
...
This year my watermelons are thriving late in the season. I
suppose it's the varieties. I've never grown these before. I've got
yellow doll and orange sunshine seedless. I highly recommend both. The
yellow doll does fine for a pollinator and produces a great melon. I'm
in Ohio, zone 5. The quality seems to have diminished in the fall
picked melons. It's grainier, and the yellow and orange flesh,
respectively is not as bright. I picked when the tendril by the fruit
dried up, summer and fall. I think the leaf cover is not as heavy. Any
ideas why, and if there's anything I could do differently if I get a
long season next year?




[email protected] 18-09-2005 01:57 PM

I have found that the quality of watermelon diminishes as the day
shortens. They apparently the need the extra hours of sunlight to
develop maximum sugars.



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