Saturday, December 6, 2008

Zucchini

Again, reviewing my garden calendar, the veggie garden out the front was planted 25th September - this is only 2 months ago

Already veggies are just about ready for harvesting - first up is the zucchini. Lisa wanted to know when the zucchini was ready to pick - for those of us in the know, please don't sneer at my wife's naive-ness - Zucchini can be picked as soon as it is a size that you'd like to eat it at - generally this is about 15 to 20 centimeters. The longer you leave it, the bigger it gets - the bigger it gets, the tougher, but they're still very edible

A problem I've been having with these zucchinis is that shortly after a "fruit" starts to develop, the ends turn yellow and brown, eventually shrivelling up and dropping off. Some casual observation sees that there are no bees in my garden and hence the problem.... no pollination.
Zucchinis will grow male and female flowers. They're easy to tell apart since the female flower will have the actual fruit under it, whereas the male just has a thin stem. Taking matters into your own hands, pick the male flower and peel the petals off to reveal the middle bit (pistol) - dab this around in the similar area of the female's flower (stigma) and you've now hand pollinated your zucchini and put a bee out of a job.

Incidentally, there is a world wide bee shortage which is severally impacting the farming world - to the extent that many commercial farms are having to build their own bee colonies or hand pollinate! Many blame this shortage on genetically modified (GM) crops whose time of introduction is coincidentally aligned to the start of the bee population decline

Anyway - here's the zucchini that was lucky enough to be picked first

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Amazing!!

Leanne said...

Just 2 items of interest - Is naive-ness a word?
Also, typical that only the female plant does the work? :)