Fast covering ground cover with Squash (Kabocha)

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Posted by john hamilton on March 3, 2010, 4:18 pm
 
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I know someone with some ground to spare which at moment they find difficult
to maintain.  So some fast growing ground cover which requires little
attention would be good to keep the weeds at bay.

Recently I saw a fast growing squash with big leaves that covered the ground
quickly.  I was told it was a japanese squash called Kabocha.

Looking up kabocha on wikpedia i see there are 8 varieties.  Would anyone
know which one would be the easiest type to grow in the London area and also
which is also a good tasting one.   Thanks for any advice.




Posted by echinosum on March 4, 2010, 9:26 am
 


john hamilton;879053 Wrote:

at moment they find

Squash are frost-tender annuals.  You plant them out in the garden in
June, or
perhaps late May, and then their leaves probably go funny by
about the end of
October.  So with only 4 months growth they won't be
much use as a weed
suppressant.  Also they need lots of rich compost in
the ground to grow well,
and lots of water.  My experience of growing
squash is that, er, you have to
weed around them.

If you do want to grow squash, best choose a variety selected for
British
conditions.    realseeds.co.uk is very good for varieties
selected for British
conditions.  Other kinds of squash can produce lots
of leaves too.




--
echinosum

Posted by john hamilton on March 5, 2010, 5:46 am
 



===========================================================================

Thanks.   Is there a vegetable then that you could recommend as a good weed
suppressent?



Posted by countymayo.j on March 5, 2010, 7:41 am
 

X-No-Archive:Yes

Nick from Cambridge sent me some seeds of a fast growing ground
covering squash, I'll bet he will know which type you mean.

Judith

Posted by nmm1 on March 5, 2010, 7:46 am
 


Basically, any of the Cucurbita maxima (hubbard) varieties that are
happy in the UK.  Send me a postal address by Email, and I can send
some.  The ones I have are Queensland Blue, which is VERY vigorous,
and a New Zealand one.  They may have hybridised :-)

Regards,
Nick Maclaren.

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