Pumpkins not grown

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`--> Re: Pumpkins not grown David Hare-Scot...09-02-2009
Posted by silky951 on September 2, 2009, 2:12 pm
 
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Hi there, new to the forum so hello!!

Right, i'm not a real gardener infact i hate gardening full stop, ive
even put
blue slate chips down where the grass was so i do not need to
cut the grass
anymore.

But, i have a little bit of soil space against my fence which is about
3 foot by
10 foot, and I use this space every year to grow things so i
can sit in the back
garden on a summers evening and watch what ive
planted. I make lots of home brew
ales, and while i sit in the garden
on an evening i have a few pints and just
take in the bits and bobs i
have grown through the summer months, these are just
the usual stuff a
few onions, cabbage, peas, and potatoes etc (not in the same
year i try
to grow different things each year)

Right, This year I put in a few pumpkin seeds, they grew really nice
and lovely
yellow flowers appeared dropped off, and then nothing, after
they had been
pollinated i expected the flowers to fall and a pumpkin
appear from somewhere,
and grow.

nothing has happened at all, but where the flowers where the stalks
have swollen
like little broadbean shaped things.

here are a couple of pics hopefully you can see them but they are from
a mobile
phone so not great quality.

any advice on what went wrong, or why no pumpkins came please.

[image: http://i29.tinypic.com/2ytr59j.jpg ]

[image: http://i27.tinypic.com/24uxhxt.jpg ]




--
silky951


Posted by David Hare-Scott on September 2, 2009, 7:46 pm
 

silky951 wrote:

Those are not pumpkins they are some sort of brassica (cabbage family)
possibly broccoli gone to seed.  They are badly eaten by some bug, probably
cabbage moth but I cannot see clearly enough.  The little broadbean like
things are the seed pods of the brassica and they are not generally eaten
although you could save some of the oldest for seed for next year.  The
leaves or immature flowering head of such veges are the parts generally
eaten but I wouldn't eat those.  Pull them out and stop feeding the bugs.

As to what went wrong - I don't know where to start.  Maybe you could get a
book from the library on basic vege growing that has pictures.  One step you
need to take if you really want to grow something edible is to plant the
right thing for your climate at the right time of year.  If your climate is
cold with a short summer it may not be possible to grow pumpkins at all.  As
you haven't told us where you are I cannot give specific advice.

David