Jaune Gros De Paris
(http://i126.photobucket.com/albums/p94/rhubarbthrasher/gros.jpg)
the rest (apart from the I.F.E.10.M ones)
(http://i126.photobucket.com/albums/p94/rhubarbthrasher/rest.jpg)
WOW! I have never have any joy growing any squash other than courgettes. I wish I could grow pumpkins; never grown one yet. Will be trying Butternut Squash next year. ::) ::)
the picture doesn't do them justice, but i'm not carrying all the b*ggers into the garden again for another one ;D
Great haul RT. What is the one at the back next to the Jaune gros de Paris. It looks like one I have that I can't identify.
Tricia
maybe i should take a better pic. The other big one is a Galeuse d'Eysine - pinky colour with little warts on it
lovely haul, well done. at my count i think i see 10 different varieties, may i ask how many plants per variety did you grow?
I grew 11 varieties, though not all of them might have fruited. soil was very poor. About 20 plants, though 5 or 6 went in very late and did nothing. I was lucky to get 2 fruits per plant. Much better than last year mind. The dark ones on the ground in the middle are a mixture of Bon Bon and Buttercup, so that's where the extra one is, I think. Also then that green one is the spagetti squash
Thanks RT - mine doesn't have any warts so I think it must be something else. Mine weighs 5.5kg and is a pinky/apricot/ beige colour.
Tricia
Quote from: Rhubarb Thrasher on September 22, 2008, 16:34:16
I grew 11 varieties, though not all of them might have fruited. soil was very poor. About 20 plants, though 5 or 6 went in very late and did nothing. I was lucky to get 2 fruits per plant. Much better than last year mind. The dark ones on the ground in the middle are a mixture of Bon Bon and Buttercup, so that's where the extra one is, I think. Also then that green one is the spagetti squash
ok thanks for the reply. i am thinking of growing at least five different varieties for storing so on your results i think i would grow 2 plants per variety and hopefully i will have agood amount for storing next winter.
Well done! Any tips for success?
What's the green one with the yellow ridges to the right on the bench? I have these in my patch, but they don't seem to tally with anything I thought I had sown.
amphibian- i'm not sure either! by a process of elimination it's either Sweet Meat or Sweet Oven. can't find a picture of Sweet Oven, but sweet Meat are the two next to them (I think) so they're Sweet oven
They look like Mongogo
[img=]http://www.kokopelli-seed-foundation.com/actu/upload/04-49-1.jpg[/img]
However, I sowed neither Mongogo nor Sweet Oven. At a loss really.
they do indeed, exactly! I've never heard of them
Quote from: tricia on September 22, 2008, 16:44:21
Thanks RT - mine doesn't have any warts so I think it must be something else. Mine weighs 5.5kg and is a pinky/apricot/ beige colour.
Tricia
It could possibly still be Galeuse d'Eysine, I grew these last year and they only developed the warty surface after I'd cut them and stored them for a while!
I was going to suggest the same thing. It's about 12 lb, so a lot more developed than yours, and the warts on mine are a lot smaller than the the warts i've seen on those i've seen on the internet :o ;D
Found a pic.....looks like there are a few warty bits on it, my memory is pants! :-\ It developed an awful lot more after cutting though..... ;D
(http://i93.photobucket.com/albums/l47/dlp133/LateAugust2007109.jpg)
The warts come on leaps and bounds once cut, they develop on dinks and wounds while stile on the plant. Indeed you can scratch patterns into the skin and they then 'wart up'.
One of my favourite pumpkins, superb flavour.
Now there is a gardener with true class...well done to you. You have some of my favourites there, I am definately jealous and bow to you and you wonderful haul. You have a few there not so easy to grow so you have done considerably well.
In awe.. XX Jeannine
of course they're you're favourites Jeannine! They're your blooming seeds! So A BIG THANKS to you too ;D
Cheers
RT
Quote from: Rhubarb Thrasher on September 23, 2008, 20:36:57
of course they're you're favourites Jeannine! They're your blooming seeds! So A BIG THANKS to you too ;D
Cheers
RT
;D ;D ;D You do make me laugh, Jeannine and I hope you can raise a smile too?
Smashing squashes RT. 8) Many congrats.
btw.....are little underdevloped ones edible, anyone? Jeannine sent me a couple of Woppa Brian's Jumbo seeds - one rotted off, one plant survived. On that plant, one squash got munched by slugs and the remaining one is still small, bout 6" diameter? and doubt it will get much bigger now. So..edible or decoration?
Oh you , I am laughing now, I really had forgotten, but I am so glad I sent them.
Lish..what is this Hyacinth thingy, have I missed something somewhere or am I under much more strain than I thought
Yes eat the under done ones just like courgettes, even the tiny ones, seeds and all.
XX Jeannine
I'm so pleased RT raised a smile for you tonight J and thanks for the advice about what is surely the Littlest Pumkin (remember that? ::) ;D)
I am now, officially, the Bucket Lady - geddit?
(not that the 'real' Hyacinth would ever admit to shopping at the Co-op, of course..)
xxx
I can just picture you with lace trimmed bloomers in your wellies and your wedding hat... now I am really laughing. Oh the littlest pumpkin, why don't we have daft threads like that anymore..like Trixies Christmas trip, the nicknames for lottie folks and the hilarious adventures to get the manure from the farm with the one legged chicken and THE family ..da da daa da daa..right out of the movie.
Come on Roo and Lish..get a new thread and get one going.
XX Jeannine