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Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Cantaloupes
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I live in middle US my canelloph are going crazy 4 plants and like 25 melons taking over everything. Can I cut some of the vines and still have them grow and freshen the fruit already started?
To save space, you can try training the vines on trellises. Be sure to support the developing fruit, with a cloth sling.
Pruning the melon vines can make them susceptible to disease and insects, and the more leaves a vine has, the sweeter the melons might be. But if they are outgrowing the space, you can try pinching the growing tips of the main runner(s). This will sometimes encourage the growth of lateral vines that branch off the runner(s) and produce most of the fruit. Some gardeners do trim the lateral vines back as well and/or remove all but 1 or 2 fruit per lateral. This can help the plant to focus on developing larger fruit. To prune the lateral vines, one method is to: Select those that are developing fruit; cut them back to about 3 or 4 sets of leaves further beyond where the last healthy developing fruit is that you want to keep. Remove all but 1 or 2 fruit per lateral. Remove non-fruiting laterals, but be sure that you have at least four laterals on the main vine, with a healthy amount of leaves. About 50 days before first fall frost, pinch off developing flowers, leaving the remaining fruit to mature.
I am in Sacramento CA. We have a 9 foot long by 8 foot tall trellis that is supporting about 13 cantaloupe plants, and has just under 60 melons. The first 40 or so have been on the vine for well over the stated period. They have not turned yellow or produced the aroma of ripe fruit yet, and the plants are now at about 104 days, give or take. They seem to have stagnated as far as maturity. I've been watering with a line of drip emitters on each side. each emitter is 1 gallon per hour, and there's about 1.5 emitters per plant, with a watering cycle of 13 minutes twice a day. I recently cut back to hand watering to see if there would be any change, but as of yet there isn't. Don't know why they are taking so long to ripen. there mulch and compost around the base, it's not soggy by any means, and only recently have we seen the beginnings of aphids on one section. They look healthy otherwise, some are small and some are large and medium size, as well as some newer ones that came later still forming. Any ideas, or should I keep patient. The fruits are still greenish on the background and the exterior is properly rough. No sine of cracking around the vine
If the vines and melons look healthy they are still growing. Leave the melons on the vines until you see signs that the vines are starting to dry out or that the melons are ripe. You may have too many melons on the vines and that can cause some of the delay. Remove any new flowers and small melons that you don't think will mature.
I leave in tropical zone of Africa. We have many months of raining season. Can I grow melons by open field?
How is cantaloque seed preserved and can it grow in tropical Africa?.
i want to ask that how much light do cantaloupe need?low or high? and how much humidity cantaloupe need?
The most important thing fir cantaloupe is water,soil,and sun if you get at least 6 hours of sun and water it every day and your soil is fertile meaning flowers can grow and have lots of blooms then you should do great.
We're not sure what you mean by humidity. Cantaloupes require a constant supply of moisture during the growing season. High humidity could certainly lead to more problems with fungus and disease. Humidity is more of factor post-harvest when it comes to storage.
We're also not clear what you mean by light. Cantaloupes grow best if the temperatures are between 65掳 and 95掳F.
How many seeds go per hill? Also is it possible to use a drip irrigation system when planting in hills?
Thanks!