Showing posts with label Greenhouse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greenhouse. Show all posts

Friday, May 15, 2020

My sad attempt to grow the Tursuluk Kelek

In Turkish, the term Tursuluk Kelek roughly translates into “unripe melon”. However, the word Kelek or unripe can mean a number of other things, such as without hair or stupid. A doctor I was talking to one day who came from Turkey said that it also means that something is “no good”. The last meaning is what my experience with the Tursuluk Kelek.





March 23rd, 2019












March 26th





April 1st






April 3rd




The seeds that I received from my brother were very good seeds. They sprouted quickly and the plants grew well. Once in the ground, however, it was a different story. As anyone who has grown in a sterile soil can tell you, plants require healthy bacteria to grow well.




April 11th






April 29th










Having healthy bacteria - along with being aware of when the plant was low on water - were two things was just one of the many mistakes I made with this plant. Part of the problem was how I set up my hydroponic buckets. The issue is that I was using tomato cages that were larger than the baskets. This meant that if I wanted to look under the baskets, I had to remove the wire cages from the soil around the buckets.




April 30th






June 11th









By the time in the season that I figured out this trick and began looking at water levels more often, it was too late. I tried my best to add water to the Tursuluk Kelek, but the roots that required air were already growing down toward the bottom of the bucket. This meant that when I added a lot of water, I drowned the plant. If you, as a gardener, have ever experienced how a plant acts when it cannot get air, you will understand what I am talking about. Though I imagine plant roots can live without air longer than people can, the window of time for plants to survive without air is extremely short.




June 14th

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

Agrolife Tondo Massafrese

One of the Carosello varieties I decided to grow out in 2019 was the Agrolife Tondo Massafrese. It is not that I do not already have a good Massafra variety. The truth is that I am always looking for other good variants of what I have to help provide additional positive genetic inputs into the seed I already have. Think of it as expanding the genetics of my future garden.








Growing the Agrolife Tondo Massafrese earlier in the season




While I enjoy many of my current carosello cucumber varieties, if I can get other similar variants of the same variety that have desirable traits, then the cross of these two variants should produce a more desirable carosello than their parents. This is why I am often growing similar carosello varieties. It is not just that I love growing carosello (which I do). It is also that I am continuing to look for the most productive beautiful and delicious cucumbers that the world has to offer.







Though a picture is worth a thousand words, many seed packets are worth two words in my vocabulary. The most common phrase I pick when looking at a carosello seed packet is “We’ll see”. As for this specific seed packet, my growout of this carosello left me saying just one thing: “Nope”.

Friday, May 8, 2020

Long Shot Carosello Barese Growout

In a long-shot attempt to find a spotted carosello specimen similiar to my friend Giuseppe, I grew out the Carosello Barese in my hydrophonic basket to see if anything different occured Apparently not. This grow-out turned out to produce the same carosello cucumber variety as always.















Note: growing in poor soils or conditions in which the plants feel stressed will not produce bitter fruit. However, fruit size and shape will suffer as a result. Of all the factors that result from plant stress, I have not found that fruit color changes from plants grown in ideal conditions to those grown in less desirable conditions.






Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Trialing the Zorzi Carosello Spuredda Leccese

Of all the varieties I grew in my greenhouse this summer, the Zorzi Carosello Spuredda Leccese was my favorite. It started out very healthy and strong and was quick to set fruit and produce abundantly. I harvested the first small fruit on May 9th, just to try it out.



May 14th




Plant sprouting March 19th, 2019












April 1st, 2019








All true leaves showing. Some problem in the left plants




Additional compost/ammendments helped the plants recover - April 11th.


Although many other carosello cucumbers turn out to be completely different then the picture, this one held pretty close to what the picture displayed. However, the picture has a photograph of three cucumbers that look the same – which is very different from what I experienced. Though fruit shape was generally cylindrical, fruit color varied dramatically from one cucumber to another – even on the same plant. Although I can select cucumber varieties by growing out like cucumbers on one plant, the genetics of color become much more difficult to reproduce when the plant produces cucumbers that each look a little different. Though I was hand pollinating the plant by selfing (pollinating the female flower from male flowers on the same plant) I was unable to get much consistency in color until my second planting.




April 27th, 2019












April 29th









April 30th
























May 1st












May 2nd



May 4th






















 
May 6th, with flash




Without flash







May 8th



May 9th



May 9th



May 13th
















Removing fuzz to check color underneath



May 21st


By the time of the second crop, the Zorzi carosello had a fruit color that looked more like a mix of Scopattizo and dark Leccese. A little pretty, but not exactly what I was looking for. Texture was decent, as was water content. The seed of this variety is not narrow like the native dark Leccese. It was however darker in color like the Scopattizo Barese, so the parent plants that the seed originated from may be more closely related to this variety.



July 20th, 2019
















September 18th, 2019



So - will this carosello be making my future seed lineup? 

Don't plan on it any time soon.