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Dawn 27-07-2004 11:02 PM

growing zukes for seed
 
I'd like to let some go for seed for next year. How big is big enough? I
just got back from vacation and picked two that are longer than my arm (
my house-sitter ignored my request to pick them when they were small)
and the seeds still look small and white. Should I compost these and
try again? Or will they germinate after they have dried some?



Dawn



Glenna Rose 28-07-2004 05:14 AM

growing zukes for seed
 
writes:
I'd like to let some go for seed for next year. How big is big enough? I
just got back from vacation and picked two that are longer than my arm (
my house-sitter ignored my request to pick them when they were small)
and the seeds still look small and white. Should I compost these and
try again? Or will they germinate after they have dried some?

Dawn


If you have a way to dry them (food dehydrator or oven), try some like
that before you give up. From here last year, I understand they are good
dried. I planted one plant this year to try it. The first one was ready
Sunday, but I gave that one to a dear neighbor who loves the stuff
(Really!!!) and has no luck growing them. I think it's the 3-minute a day
watering they get, no chance to put down roots and no real water in the
soil.

It seems logical that chips from them would be good. You have those two
monsters, give it a try. Maybe even fruit leather, or vegetable leather?

Glenna
not a fan





Pat Kiewicz 28-07-2004 12:03 PM

growing zukes for seed
 
Dawn said:

I'd like to let some go for seed for next year. How big is big enough? I
just got back from vacation and picked two that are longer than my arm (
my house-sitter ignored my request to pick them when they were small)
and the seeds still look small and white. Should I compost these and
try again? Or will they germinate after they have dried some?


Squashes are so prone to outcrossing that you could never be sure what
will result in the next generation. Zukes will cross with most pumpkins,
acorn squash (and several other types of winter squash), all sorts of
summer squash, and many gourds. You could end up with something
interesting, something completely dull, or something inedibly bitter,
hard-skinned, and warty.

To get ripe seeds, you'd have to let the fruit stay on the plant until
autumn. The stems would get to be like wood and the rinds very hard.

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

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


Dawn 29-07-2004 05:06 PM

growing zukes for seed
 
Pat Kiewicz wrote:

To get ripe seeds, you'd have to let the fruit stay on the plant until
autumn. The stems would get to be like wood and the rinds very hard.


Ah, thanks. It sounds like I am better off just hunting down another
packet of seeds.


Dawn





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