Squash plants dropping fruit(not a pollination issue)
ahappy camper zone10
5 years ago
last modified: 5 years ago
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digdirt2
5 years agolast modified: 5 years agodaninthedirt (USDA 9a, HZ9, CentTX, Sunset z30, Cfa)
5 years agolast modified: 5 years agoRelated Discussions
Planting diff. species of squash: how to stop cross-pollination?
Comments (2)"Isolating C. Pepos is an art involving hand pollination and row covers to exclude pollinators." Agree and even a couple of miles won't be enough. If you don't want to use row covers then you can bag some of the female blooms and hand pollinate them. Then only save seed from those fruit. A couple of squash will give you plenty of seeds to save. Dave Here is a link that might be useful: Preventing Cross Pollination FAQ...See Morepollinating squash by hand
Comments (6)hi there! as a newbie last year, i found it pretty easy, and here's what i did: once i figured out which were the male and female flowers (beautiful aren't they?), i realized that yes, the males came before the females. so i snipped the male flowers and put them in a large zippy bag, no more than two per bag. as soon as the females appeared and opened up, i'd grab a male from the fridge, pick or snip the petals off where the yellow met the green, leaving the 'tip' with all that glorious pollen. then i'd 'tickle' the inside (the stamen??) of the female with the 'tip' of the male. it worked EVERY TIME! and i noticed that the more pollen i covered the female with, the quicker and bigger the fruit was - could have just been a coincidence! good luck and i really hope this helps!...See MoreOne fruit on entire squash plant?
Comments (9)I don't think you can do anything but hope some more male buds show. I am finding on my pumpkins and melons about 2-3 fruit per plant, so I don't think you are generally going to have very many to begin with. It's also possible you had a few more but they aborted due to lack of pollination. I know I have several pumpkins which have done this. If space is limited you might want to consider something other than a long vining squash, either that or try to run it up a trellis and grow a few more. You can support the fruit with slings attached to the trellis. Good luck!...See MorePepper plants dropping fruit . . . why?
Comments (5)So, could this still qualify as "blossom drop" even though pollination occured and fruits were set? I use organic fertilizer, and not too much of it. Mostly using the higher-potassium kind. Where do you find liquid calcium? I also read somewhere on the forum that magnesium can also help with this. I do have shade issues, but I think the peppers are getting at least 7+ hours/day. I wonder if wet soil could be an issue. I've amended a heavy clay soil bed with compost and lots of other 'good stuff,' but it is still very dense and has needed little (none, really) watering so far this year. Our temps have been lower than normal (70s-80s) and we've also had more rain than usual. Thanks! veg...See MoreJean
5 years agofarmerdill
5 years agoahappy camper zone10
5 years agolast modified: 5 years agodigdirt2
5 years agoJean
5 years agoahappy camper zone10
5 years agolast modified: 5 years agoHU-679326413
3 years agoErica Craig
3 years agogumby_ct
3 years agoDon V Zone 5-6 Cleveland OH
3 years ago
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