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General Schvantzkoph 08-03-2011 06:08 PM

Melon suggestions for New England
 
I'd like to be able to grow a melon. I do fine with tomatoes, peas, corn,
strawberries, blueberries and beans but I've never been able to get a
melon to grow.

I live in Massachusetts, near the New Hampshire border so I have a short
growing season. Has anyone been able to get a melon to grow around here?
I'd like a suggestion for a variety suited to this climate and tips on how
to handle it.

David Hare-Scott[_2_] 08-03-2011 09:12 PM

Melon suggestions for New England
 
General Schvantzkoph wrote:
I'd like to be able to grow a melon. I do fine with tomatoes, peas,
corn, strawberries, blueberries and beans but I've never been able to
get a melon to grow.

I live in Massachusetts, near the New Hampshire border so I have a
short growing season. Has anyone been able to get a melon to grow
around here? I'd like a suggestion for a variety suited to this
climate and tips on how to handle it.


How long is it usually between the last frost of spring and the first of
autumn?

What is the typical (not maximum) temperature mid afternoon in high summer?

David


General Schvantzkoph 09-03-2011 02:39 AM

Melon suggestions for New England
 
On Wed, 09 Mar 2011 08:12:37 +1100, David Hare-Scott wrote:

General Schvantzkoph wrote:
I'd like to be able to grow a melon. I do fine with tomatoes, peas,
corn, strawberries, blueberries and beans but I've never been able to
get a melon to grow.

I live in Massachusetts, near the New Hampshire border so I have a
short growing season. Has anyone been able to get a melon to grow
around here? I'd like a suggestion for a variety suited to this climate
and tips on how to handle it.


How long is it usually between the last frost of spring and the first of
autumn?


The season is June through September

What is the typical (not maximum) temperature mid afternoon in high
summer?

The hottest couple of weeks in the summer are in the 90s, most of the
summer is in the 70s or 80s.


David



David Hare-Scott[_2_] 09-03-2011 07:14 AM

Melon suggestions for New England
 
General Schvantzkoph wrote:
On Wed, 09 Mar 2011 08:12:37 +1100, David Hare-Scott wrote:

General Schvantzkoph wrote:
I'd like to be able to grow a melon. I do fine with tomatoes, peas,
corn, strawberries, blueberries and beans but I've never been able
to get a melon to grow.

I live in Massachusetts, near the New Hampshire border so I have a
short growing season. Has anyone been able to get a melon to grow
around here? I'd like a suggestion for a variety suited to this
climate and tips on how to handle it.


How long is it usually between the last frost of spring and the
first of autumn?


The season is June through September

What is the typical (not maximum) temperature mid afternoon in high
summer?

The hottest couple of weeks in the summer are in the 90s, most of the
summer is in the 70s or 80s.



I see why you have had trouble in the past, your season is short and not
very warm. I cannot help with a quick growing melon but I do have one other
trick that you may not have seen. If you haven't tried this before it will
give you several weeks head start in spring.

Conventional wisdom is that you should sow cucurbits directly and not
transplant them because they are susceptible to transplant shock and are
often set back considerably by transplanting. However, you can transplant
them without problems if you do it without disturbing the root ball.

The best seedling container for them is the plastic tubes that are used for
tube stock. These are about 15 cm (6in) high, and 5cm (2in) across and
taper towards the bottom. The ones with square cross section are better
than the round ones as the roots don't go round and round. Sow one seed per
tube in soil heavier than normal seed raising mix, these are big strong
seeds and will deal with this quite well, the reason is to form a coherent
root ball. Sow more than you need so you can choose the strongest
seedlings.

Keep them in your hothouse, coldframe or whatever, once the cotyledons open
they will need bright light and some sun. Plant them out after the last
frost. They will come out of the tube with the root ball (well the root
truncated square pyramid) intact and slip straight into your prepared plot
with no shock. This will work for melons, cucumbers or any other cucurbit.

David


General Schvantzkoph 09-03-2011 12:13 PM

Melon suggestions for New England
 
On Wed, 09 Mar 2011 18:14:51 +1100, David Hare-Scott wrote:

General Schvantzkoph wrote:
On Wed, 09 Mar 2011 08:12:37 +1100, David Hare-Scott wrote:

General Schvantzkoph wrote:
I'd like to be able to grow a melon. I do fine with tomatoes, peas,
corn, strawberries, blueberries and beans but I've never been able to
get a melon to grow.

I live in Massachusetts, near the New Hampshire border so I have a
short growing season. Has anyone been able to get a melon to grow
around here? I'd like a suggestion for a variety suited to this
climate and tips on how to handle it.

How long is it usually between the last frost of spring and the first
of autumn?


The season is June through September

What is the typical (not maximum) temperature mid afternoon in high
summer?

The hottest couple of weeks in the summer are in the 90s, most of the
summer is in the 70s or 80s.



I see why you have had trouble in the past, your season is short and not
very warm. I cannot help with a quick growing melon but I do have one
other trick that you may not have seen. If you haven't tried this
before it will give you several weeks head start in spring.

Conventional wisdom is that you should sow cucurbits directly and not
transplant them because they are susceptible to transplant shock and are
often set back considerably by transplanting. However, you can
transplant them without problems if you do it without disturbing the
root ball.

The best seedling container for them is the plastic tubes that are used
for tube stock. These are about 15 cm (6in) high, and 5cm (2in) across
and taper towards the bottom. The ones with square cross section are
better than the round ones as the roots don't go round and round. Sow
one seed per tube in soil heavier than normal seed raising mix, these
are big strong seeds and will deal with this quite well, the reason is
to form a coherent root ball. Sow more than you need so you can choose
the strongest seedlings.

Keep them in your hothouse, coldframe or whatever, once the cotyledons
open they will need bright light and some sun. Plant them out after the
last frost. They will come out of the tube with the root ball (well the
root truncated square pyramid) intact and slip straight into your
prepared plot with no shock. This will work for melons, cucumbers or
any other cucurbit.

David


Thanks



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