DISPATCHES FROM THE FARMRSS

Cucumbers and Zucchinis

Saturday, January 23, 2010
A short while before Christmas, we planted our Lebanese cucumbers. We grow them in one of the polytunnels (greenhouses) with some of the heirloom tomatoes because we find they don't prosper in our climate when grown outside, with it's fluctuating and at times extreme weather conditions.



In a few weeks we'll be picking an abundance of cucs. daily!

I know some folk manage to grow cucumbers around here in their back yards without any form of covering/temperature control but we can only guess their yards or a particular spot there in present a good little micro-climate for their cucumbers to grow well. The farm is much more open than that and because we rotate crops, we couldn't keep replanting them in the same location year after year even if we did have a specially protected location outdoors.

We planted the zucchinis back in November and they have just started to fruit. 


A zucchini plant.


Small zucchini with flower (female) still intact.
See the male flower in the background.

Zucchinis are also know by their French name 'courgette' in some European countries, NZ & the U.K.. 

They are actually a summer squash. They can be yellow, green or light green but we are only growing the dark green ones this season. They are rich in vitamin C and other anti-oxidents. 

They have gorgeous golden, edible flowers (more about that another time). Botanically, the zucchini fruit is considered to be the 'swollen ovary' attached to the female flower. The flowers occurring on stalks without zucchinis are the male flowers. Plenty of bees are needed for pollinating zucchinis for the squash to be produced and to grow healthily. The bees pollinate from the male flowers to the female flowers, fertilising the seeds in the immature fruit. If the seeds aren’t pollinated, the plant won’t waste energy growing a non-viable fruit, so it just withers and drops off, and the plant tries again with a fresh flower.

Anyone who has ever grown zucchinis or cucumbers for that matter, knows they go mad with very quick growing fruit (& can be master camouflage artists!). Unless you want large gourd-type zucchs. and cucs., you really need to harvest them daily to get to the fruits before they become huge...one more day can result in zuch/cuc-a-saurus! Personally, we prefer the flavour of smaller-sized zucchs. and cucs..

So between the zucchs., the cucs. and then the tomatoes when they arrive in the next few weeks, we'll be busy each morning picking their fruits whilst it is at its best, ready for the chefs, local shops and of course our farmers' market stalls each week. 




Recent Posts


Tags

heirloom tomatoes Sunflowers Winter Warmers Joel Salatin The Chefs Table herb bouquets organic farmer Farmers' Markets Cool climate veg growing Golden Shallots zucchinis Heritage Beetroots garlic bulbs lavender farm Blakes Feast Catering Spring Daylesford Worldwatch Institute garlic harvesting backyard poultry garlic sales online Lavandula Andrew Blake rain home made preserves Lake House Matt Wilkinson organic weed managment zucchini flowers soil food web lavender harvest Snow Genetically Modified Seeds new season Andrew Blake, Blakes Feast Daylesford Victoria Irrigation Jerusalem artichokes VFMA rocket organic vegetables heritage tomatoes Daylesford-Macedon Harvest Festival 2011 new season garlic Compost garlic harvest old fashion tomatoes shallots organic garlic sharing blog garlic plaits Tonia Todman organic tomatoes Summer produce organic pest control Angelica Organic Farm green manure crop mulching cucumbers Spa Country website garlic braids Corn Dollies autumn produce Pigs Will Flog Community Blog home grown tomatoes Barbara Ross roses and herbs Victorian Farmers' Market Association Accreditation Vic Central Highlands Weather GE foods Melbourne Farmers' Markets ABC Delicious Produce Awards 2010 organic industry organic farmer, website, blog, sharing Rocambole Swiss Italian heritage Boroondara Farmers' Market seed raising Food ethics bok choi heirloom culinary herbs soil preparation Christmas 2009 bird scarers Australian garlic Japanese Mustard Greens Angelica GM Foods Pope Joan cafe ABC Delicious magazine capeweed mesclan salad Blumin seedlings garlic update open pollinated Fertiliser Angelica Organics heirloom vegetables Monsanto eschallots Ethical eating Vogue Entertaining and Travel Produce Awards Organic chickens relocalisation

Archive