how to grow squash, cucumbers and other cucurbits, with tom stearns
WITHOUT THEM, there would be no proper pickles, no pumpkin pies, no ratatouille. The melon-baller would sit idle, summer fruit salads undermined. Cucurbits are favorite food plants—but can be challenging. Don’t give up; learn how to grow squash, melons and cucumbers, with Tom Stearns.
Squash pests and diseases—from squash bugs, vine borers and cucumber beetles, to powdery and downy mildews and bacterial wilts—can make it all sound like just too much. But as a seed farmer, High Mowing Organic Seeds founder Stearns has to harvest lots of extra-ripe fruit to get his hidden-inside crop. He gets to the finish line by working to avoid any preventable setbacks, first and foremost, always keeping in mind the three key things about being a cucurbit:
- You love heat.
- You’re thirsty (but your shallow root system means you depend on the immediate area for water resources).
- You love to eat.
Oh, and the aforementioned “issues” love you—some more or less depending on species and variety, or what region you garden in, or both.
step 1: provide enough consistent heat
ESPECIALLY in the early growth stages, says Tom (who farms in Zone 4B northern Vermont), never let a cucurbit cool off.
“If you put a seed in cold soil,” he says, “it will take three times the normal time to germinate—and it will come out of ground so weak and susceptible to disease and other issues.” Ideal soil temperature for cucumber and summer squash germination, for instance: 85F (with no sprouting below 60F).
Likewise, even if you start seeds in the cozy indoors on a heat mat and grow them under lights, but then transplant into cold garden soil, “the seedlings will just sit there.”
“Big reminder: heat,” says Tom.
Recommendations: Pre-warm the soil with black plastic sheeting for a week before the setout date (which is just after final frost). Transplant most cucurbits into slits cut in the sheeting after a headstart of 3-4 weeks indoors; watermelons at 6 weeks. (That’s a black plastic-covered squash row at High Mowing after harvest, above.) Many gardeners also cover cucurbit transplants with Reemay for extra warmth; more advice on that under “more pest protection,” below.
step 2: provide ample needed fertility
CUCURBITS are really heavy feeders. “You can’t really overfertilize,” Tom says, “the way you can with tomatoes and peppers, where you’d get only foliage by adding too much Nitrogen, at the expense of fruit set.” (Tom is an organic farmer, so he’s not talking about the potential for overdosing crops with fast-acting chemical Nitrogen, which can “overfertilize” or even destroy plants.)
“These are primarily vegetative plants,” says Tom. “Producing 10- or 20-foot-long vines compared to the amount of fruit per vine requires lots of fertility.”
Cucurbits are not too particular about micronutrients, he says. “I think of Nitrogen as the one they want if struggling. That’s tricky, because if the only source you used was quick acting–like foliar feeds of kelp or fish emulsions–a rainy summer can wash it down to depths that cucurbits can’t tap into.” If that happens, make another application of quick-acting foliar sprays, but remember: Compost and high-organic-matter soil help longer-term by making N steadily available to replace what may have leached. Don’t skimp on proper soil-building and top-dressing.
Recommendations: Cucurbits want a high-organic-matter soil. Topdress before laying down plastic with compost and/or organic fertilizer such as blood meal or alfalfa meal, then tuck a little more into planting holes. An extra benefit to soil-warming, weed-suppressing plastic: It limits nutrient leaching from rain.
Rotating where cucurbits are planted may help outsmart pests (though admittedly, rotation works better in a large-scale setting than small gardens). Rotation can also help provide for enhanced fertility. “We work hard to have the rotation for squash be in a good position–following a crop that’s putting down Nitrogen in the right form, such as after a pea cover crop,” says Tom.
step 3: water regularly, or else
EVER LOOK at the root system of a spent cucurbit plant while pulling them at cleanup time? Not much to speak of, relatively.
“Cucurbits can’t tap into resources that are much deeper than 6 inches,” says Tom. No wonder if the plant dries out it’s very stressful—another preventable potential setback.
Recommendation: Provide regular, thorough watering throughout the root zone, without waterlogging the soil.
backing up: start with the right cucurbit variety
CHOOSING THE PROPER SEED is your first defense. Select a variety described as a good performer in your region. Seek out varieties that are bred for, or noted to have, superior resistance to pests and disease. With melons, says Tom, powdery mildew resistance is very important, for example, because the disease can really suck the sugar out of the fruit. (Melon growing, step by step.)
Also look for word in variety descriptions of exceptional vigor—since a wimpy plant that technically survives disease by just sitting there but with little fruit isn’t much help.
“Lately I’ve been paying attention to the vigor in different varieties—the plant’s adaptability and ability to handle lots of different conditions, to be resilient,” says Tom. “Sometimes when you breed for high disease resistance, if you’re not paying attention it won’t be very vigorous and produce much. If it’s really vigorous, however, it may outgrow the mildew and keep producing.”
Know the enemy’s preferences: For example, cucumber beetles love Cucurbita pepo varieties (including summer squashes, traditional pumpkins, and acorn types) and also C. maxima varieties (including many popular winter squash, such as buttercups, hubbards, turbans, kabochas, bananas)—but not butternut types (C. moschata, above) so much. Butternuts are also generally resistant to squash bugs, as are some others; again: read descriptions when buying seed.
Insights on insect preferences (such as for C. maxima) can also be used strategically on farms and in bigger gardens to plant a “trap crop” to lure pests to, perhaps sparing your main crop.
Short-season varieties may help you beat the problem clock. A must up North, short-season varieties can help Southern gardeners, too. Even where diminishing late-summer heat isn’t an issue, the shorter days-to-harvest means harvesting before mildew sets in, or before drought conditions weaken plants.
Recommendations: Select regionally appropriate, resistant, and perhaps short-season varieties where possible–and scan variety descriptions for hints about vigor, too.
more pest protection
REMEMBER that a weak plant is a vulnerable plant; work to avoid any of the potential stressors explained above (too little warmth, water, or fertility).
Many gardeners cover all their cucurbits. With all melons in particular (and butternuts, to add heat), Tom says, cover with Reemay at transplant time, opening the tunnels or removing the fabric a week to 10 days after the first flowers appear, to allow for insect pollination. Reemay should be buried on the bed edges for complete control.
Seedlings at High Mowing that are not going to be covered are dunked in or sprayed with a kaolin clay solution before setout, to deter striped cucumber beetles. (One brand-name product is Surround.) Some transplants get both clay and a heat-increasing cover.
Planting successions of summer squash gives continuous harvest, and one generation may fare better against timing of pest or disease outbreaks. Transplant the first succession immediately after your frost-free day, with the final succession three months before predicted first frost. “It’s better to plant a couple of cucumber or summer squash plants every couple of weeks,” says Tom, “rather than depend on one planting.”
Prompt cleanup of vines and roots as fruit production declines is essential. Squash bugs (above), for instance, can even overwinter as adults; leaving debris in place longer than necessary invites a population explosion. (This new companion story with entomologist Diane Alston gives more detail on squash bugs and other pests.)
Recommendations: Mechanical barriers can help thwart pests organically, as can succession plantings and prompt garden cleanup.
some of tom stearns’s favorite squash and cukes
- Summer squash: ‘Dark Star’ (a new Organic Seed Alliance collaboration), for its vigor; ‘Dunja,’ from a breeder in Holland, which is both highly resistant and high yielding; for grilling, Lebanese types (with paler skin, and fatter at the bottom) like ‘Segev;’ ‘and ‘Costata Romanesco’ and ‘Cocozelle’ for great flavor.
- Cucumbers: Open-pollinated ‘Green Finger’ from Cornell breeding has a deservedly huge following, Tom says. Small-fruited ‘Picolino’ (below, meant to be picked as small as 3 or 4 inches, or as big as 5) and ‘Manny’ (below) are lunchbox-sized favorites for kids and adults, too.
enter to win the cucurbit seeds
I’VE PURCHASED three sets of four cucurbit varieties each from High Mowing–‘Dunja’ F1 summer squash and ‘Picolino’ F1 cucumber and ‘Nutterbutter’ winter squash and ‘PMR Delicious 51’ melon–for three giveaway winners to try in their 2015 gardens. [UPDATE: The giveaway is now over. Your comments are always welcome, though.]All you have to do to enter: Answer this question in the comments box at the bottom of the page, scrolling all the way down, after the last reader comment:
With cucurbits, what’s your hit, and your miss–the one you do best with, and then one that challenges you most, and why? (It’s fine if you report that you never fail, or totally fail, with all of them–just let us know, and tell us where your garden is, too. Favorite varieties, worst pests and diseases; let us know.)(My answer: I always do well with Butternut-type squash in Zone 5B in the Hudson Valley of New York, but some years the longest-season C. maxima types don’t reach the finish line. I hand-pick insects and eggs vigilantly, grow all my cucurbits on black plastic, and do keep up with watering, too.)
No answer, or feeling shy? You can also just say, “Count me in” or something like that, and I will–but I’d love to learn more about your garden experiences.
Three winners will be were chosen at random after entries closed at midnight Sunday, March 22, and informed by email. U.S. only.
related stories:
- New! Beat pests and diseases of cucurbits with IPM tactics
- How to grow melons
- When cukes don’t fruit, or are misshapen
(Disclosure: I’m proud that High Mowing Organic Seeds is an occasional seasonal advertisers on A Way to Garden. Photos from High Mowing Organic Seeds, used with permission; squash bug and Butternut by A Way to Garden.)
After tasting them at a farm dinner, I wanted to try growing Mexican Sour Gherkins last summer. I planted them a little late, but they grew up the trellis nicely and produced NO, NONE, ZERO flowers or fruit. Not sure what happened! Want to try again this year – they are so cute on a salad!
I am in Pa and only do container gardening. I waited too long to plant my cucumber seeds last year. I think I am going to try a fenced raised bed this year due to all the rabbits and squirrels that like to eat my vegetables
We’ve had good look in zone 7b growing Sumter cucumbers. My squash, melons, and pumpkins got destroyed the last 3 years by stink bugs and Asian kudzu bugs :(
I live in Mo. I always have an over abundance of cucumbers. But I don’t seem to be able to keep an upper hand on squash bugs. They always seem to win in the end.
Butternut is always successful. I still have some in storage from last fall’s harvest.
My challenge is spaghetti squash. The plants almost always get mildew and the fruits often rot on the vine. I had better luck this past year with a bush variety.
I’m in KY. I’ve had trouble with summer squash.
I had great success with cucumbers last year-they just kept growing no matter the weather. I planted spaghetti squash and the vines reached beyond the deer fence causing the deer to eat all the flowers and young squash. I need to do a better job protecting them this summer.
I’m in Montana – Zone 4 with a short and erratic growing season. Most types of cucumbers and summer squashes do well, but it takes a lot of effort (and luck!) to get anything from a variety that takes more than 90 days to mature.
I’m rather new planting in zone 8b (only 3 seasons) so far I have found that everything is pestered by stink bugs with the exception of lemon cucumbers and a cantaloupe that I save seed from but can’t remember the variety (possibly Imperial 45.) I keep replanting like the article suggests, hoping to hit a sweet spot where I get some decent production, which worked last year with butternut squash that I harvested in Oct/Nov thanks to a long-enough growing season, and in spite of shorter days. I’ve been adding composted manure and worm castings to planting hills all winter, and want to try the remay covers and install drip irrigation. I highly value the butternut squash for long storage and multiple uses, so I’m motivated to figure that one out. Enjoyed this article!
Here in Tennessee, squash is a winner and also melons.Pumpkins
Don’t like my soil or me or both.
The silver slicer really stole the show last year. It out produced all the other cukes and was delicious to boot. The lemon cukes were short lived succumbing to the beetle invasion far too early while the Poona Kheera did stupendously. So good. We are growing in Atlantic Canada!
Honestly I don’t do well with them but I keep on trying. And this article made me realize a few things I’ve been doing wrong trying to grow them. Would love to win and try again this year!
I have grown squash ( yellow) in the past, with great results. I tried to grow butternut but rabbits ate the vines early before they grew much.
Never had much luck with cucumbers. With the above information, I will try again!!
Summer squash is the easiest for me to grow here in NM. I think I just plant tons of plants and hope the squash bugs can’t keep up! Cucumbers don’t do as well for me.
I had to live in Texas for almost 10 years because my husband is a soldier. The first year I had a garden there, I grew squash and pumpkins and melon. Well, I tried to. My ‘Winter Luxury’ pumpkins put on a ton of vegetation, but no fruit. Maybe I was just being naive to think I could grow them in that climate. Eventually, all of my squash and pumpkins died of some mysterious disease, probably a bug or fungus, that killed them off in less than 2 weeks. Felt so defeated. The only thing to survive and produce a single fruit were the melons, which did not get big, but were miniature but ripened normally. So frustrating. Texas was a no-go, unless I wanted to grow lettuce or lima beans. On the farm, as a kid, in the Heartland, I only had to tickle ground and have it “laugh” with abundance, so you can imagine the disgust I felt in Texas, where I had to fight to get much at all. I have left Texas and returned to the Heartland, and this year, for the first time in years, am looking forward to a real garden, with great hope. :)
This is my first year gardening so it’s hard to say but I’d love to have some different seed varieties to try!
I do fairly well with cucumbers, but I’ve only had softball sized watermelons, and my butternuts never even fruited the one year I planted them. I’m in zone 4B, at the foothills of the Adirondacks.
I live in N. Alabama and have had great success with cucumbers, but have an ongoing battlewith the squash bug that I don’t know I will ever win. I planted Crookneck squash and Cocozelle zucchini last year, with a successful crop before it got very hot. Then the squash bugs took over. I have tried Reemay fabric, but ended up with powdery mildew on my squash plants because of moisture/heat under the fabric. Love the challenges and experiments that go along with gardening though!
I’m in northern KY, usually I do best with Waltham butternut and Diva cucumber. I struggle every year with zucchini and the squash bug. I’ve covered them with remay until starting to flower and do succession plantings to keep producing but seems once the squash bug comes my plants don’t last long. I am going to try the black plastic this year with my cukes.
Pickling cucumbers do well for me. I grow one called Homemade Pickles, and I’ve been saving its seed for several years. Suyo Long (not for pickling whole) also does well for me. Butternuts used to do great, but lately there has been so much powdery and downy mildew b/c of our increasingly rainy summers that they have not done very well, and I am looking into PMR varieties.
I have never been able to grow melons. My grandmother grew great melons a few counties west of here. I think that was because she had much better drained soil. This was a problem sometimes: she had some very dry places on her farm that actually grew prickly pear cacti (in TN!), but for melons it was ideal.
This is the first time I am actually growing several produce in central florida. My fist year I grew peppers quite well and now none will grow. I have grown some tomatoes and sweet peas. Last year I grew one butternut squash and that was in the screened pool area. This year so far I have harvested kale and some red thin lettuce. I planted onions, green beans and sweet peas this year. Wish me luck. Please include me in the giveaway.
Butternut squash grows so well for me. Cucumbers? Not so much. They get mildew.
Unfortunately this is one of my biggest challenges. Cucumbers do pretty well for me most years. I’ve given up on summer squash because I haven’t been able to defeat the vine borers but have had some success with butternut. Last year I tried tromboncino (c. moschata) and had better luck but planted it on the late side so it didn’t have time to produce many squashes. I haven’t given up and will try again this year with fingers crossed.
Here in North east Ohio we had a cold wet summer last year, had good luck with cukes for a bit, until the cucumber beetles got the best of us, but our Connecticut Field Pumpkins did great……thank you for a great article!
Last year was my first vegetable garden in 20 years. I lost all of my squash plants to the dreaded squash bugs.