This past weekend saw our first dip to near freezing weather. While it wasn't a killing frost, the lawn was a frosty white Saturday morning and the bird bath was frozen solid. With that in mind, I harvested the last of the "tender" crops earlier in the week. Top on my list was my one and only "Lambkin", a Piel de Sapo melon from Spain. After I finished planting all of my dahlias in early July, I still had a bit of bare garden left. And of coarse I couldn't let that stay that way! So I picked up two "Lambkin" melon plants at the Farmer's Market. I knew it was pretty late in the year and that part of the garden is fairly shady, but nothing ventured, nothing gained. I was rewarded for my optimism with one - yes one! - set melon. It has been growing and slowly maturing. Finally this week the mottled green skin began to turn yellow. It was time for a harvest! It was quite aromatic and had a very interested solid white flesh.
- "Lambkin" melon - (1) 1 lbs. 10.9 oz
- "Waltham" Butternut Squash - (12) - 39 lbs. 6.0 oz.
- "Delicata" Squash - (1) 11.6 oz
The nightly temperatures have fallen enough that the large tomatoes are no longer ripening. But the smaller varieties and the cherry types keep plugging along. A nice harvest for mid-October.
- "Galina" - (57) 9.9 oz
- "Blush" - (58) 2 lbs. .7 oz
- "Chef's Choice Orange" - (1) 5.8 oz
- Wapsipinicon Peach" - (7) 9.2 oz
Good job on that melon. I actually got my melon plants going in a timely manner but the rodents thwarted my efforts by eating all the female blossoms. Nice haul of butternuts!
ReplyDeleteCongrats on the nice-looking melon, and I'm envious of your butternut harvest. For the second year, winter squash did not produce anything here.
ReplyDeleteIt's always nice when a gamble in the garden pays off like it did for your Lambkin! It sounds like a lovely one. I'm still learning about how much room winter squash needs. Some are pretty well behaved while others seem to want to take over the garden.
ReplyDeleteI shall have to take a leaf out of your book re space for butternuts as ours never produce many fruits, so more room it shall be!
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