General information and discussion about cultivating melons, cucumbers, squash, pumpkins and gourds.
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March 8, 2007 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: belgium
Posts: 134
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Hand-pollinating melons and squash
Hi,
I would like to share some hand-pollinating tricks I figured out the last few years. If you grow different varieties of melon in a small space, try this: take some drywall plugs, size:1centimeter, cut off the front part until you get a small "pipe" of about 13 millimeters, fill up the little hole that remains on the cut side (you could use a bit of tape or...), and there you have a long lasting device (years) that fits perfectly on male and female flowers. I always use the same plugs on the same varieties ,the plugs are easily marked. If you have different varieties ofsquash that you want to save seed from, use old inner tyre of bicycles ,cut them into pieces about 10 centimeters long ,put a bit of tape on one side, or use the repair kit to glue this side, make a few lenghtwise cuts in the other,open hole, that makes it easier to pass the tyre over the flower, they fit perfectly over the qsuash flowers, they last for years, and it's a good way to recycle things. They are also easily marked or scratched so varieties and tyres won't get mixed up. Orflo |
March 15, 2007 | #2 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Saumarez Ponds, NSW, Australia
Posts: 946
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Naming conventions beat me here. What's a dry wall plug? And once you have this device, what does it do? Please excuse the ignorance. Melons are one thing I'd like to be able to pollinate by hand but have found very difficult.
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Ray |
March 15, 2007 | #3 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: perth, western australia
Posts: 1,031
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hi raymondo...i've had good luck hand pollinating my ha-ogens by picking a male blossom, plucking all its petals off, peeling back the bit of green at the bottom, until the whole thing threatens to fall to fall to pieces...then shoving it into the female blossom and just leaving it there.
so far...this has worked 100% of the time with the ha-ogens. 3/4 times with the minnesota midgets. |
March 23, 2007 | #4 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Oregon
Posts: 361
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hand pollinating
I do what Tessa does. Works great.
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March 28, 2007 | #5 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Zone 10b
Posts: 67
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I don't understand what a drywall plug is either. perhaps some pics are in order. I hope mentioning GW isn't totally verboten because this thread is the best I've seen on the subject, by far. While bagging blossoms on tomatoes might be unnecessary early in the season, I wouldn't chance it on curcurbits.
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