It’s 2010, and we are really new gardeners, learning as we go. Much of our gardening is guided by Googling, trial, error, chatting with others, and more Googling. This gardening post about our pumpkin patch progress well-reflects that.
There’s a price one pays, for procrastinating. This I know well. When it comes to planned posts, when I wait for better light to get one more photo, take one more peek for a really updated report, or wait for a better opportunity to blog without having another pressing agenda….things happen. The story grows, and often, ends up a more overwhelming task, than the simple one it could have been, a little sooner. Over whelming tasks, are often a new excuse for me, to procrastinate even more. Because I know I tend to struggle with the simplicity of a post, as it is.
So now, what once was a story with a hopeful ending, now ends in a questionable future. It almost pains me to do this post, in a gardener’s drama sort of way, as I cannot revel in the joy of blogging about this, as I could have a couple of weeks ago.
But I must be strong. So here I go.
You may remember I mentioned that we decided to have a go at our own home pumpkin patch this year. Michael dug out an area for it in our front yard gardening areas, back at the end of May.
I have been beyond excited about this new gardening project. I simply love fall decor, pumpkins in particular, and I simply detest paying for them by the pound.
We love having simple natural pumpkins around the homestead, but we also enjoy getting creative with them, as we have in past years.
So growing our own pumpkins was my answer, and the thrill of the progress was an additional a perk.
We created a ‘patch’ as big as we could get away with, in the front yard space we had available. Ideally, it should be bigger. Realistically, it wasn’t going to be.
So last year, having the thoughts in our heads of growing our own pumpkins for the next season, (in part because of the staggering price total at the pumpkin-purchase-checkout), we harvested a handful of pumpkin seeds, from our expensive pumpkins.
We washed them, let them dry, and put them away.
And by golly, come spring this year, we actually still remembered where we put them.
So we soaked them over night, and kept them wrapped in damp paper towels for 2 days, in a warm place, like filtered sun. Which, if you aren’t aware, isn’t easy to keep paper towel damp.It dries so quickly, especially in window sunlight. But thankfully, the kids were always on it, with the bottle of water, misting and re-misting.
What would we do without them?
They all peeled the edges of the seeds, and kept their own to plant.
Then we got to planting, in the awaiting patch.
We thought we’d have a little pumpkin growing competition. So the boys had their seeds that they planted together in one corner.
And the girls had theirs, in the opposite corner of the ring.
(Sounds like a real fight heating up here, huh?)
We also planted the extra seeds, in the middle.
Now, we also had bought 2 piddly pumpkin plants from the nursery. Not to say that I didn’t have faith in our ability to grow great pumpkins with our own seeds, but, I wasn’t really sure if I did. So…just in case.
Because I was not paying for pumpkins by the pound again.
So, we had 5 mounds where seeds or plants were planted.
Before we knew it, the starter plants, and the boys and girls planted pumpkin seeds, were neck in neck.
Or is it neck and neck?
Gosh, I’m stuck on that, and thinking too hard on this now. I don’t get it. Does this phrase about necks come from giraffes and their neck-wrangling behavior?
Whoa…way off topic. Re-focusing.
But I’m going to google that saying about where it derived from, if I remember to!
Anyway, every mound of plants, were looking pretty good, pretty quickly. Anyone random visitor would be hard-pressed, to figure out which were starter plants, and which we planted seeds.
Soon, we all realized that the competition was going to be nearly impossible, to monitor. All of the vines were growing into each other’s space, and they were hard to follow or keep straight. I mean…I sure wasn’t going to be the referee on this one. I have enough confusion to straighten out in my head in a day.
But one thing was for sure. We were very excited. Most-especially-ME.
Of course, there was that little fear they would forever remain plants, just like this, never to birth a single pumpkin.
Or so much as a gourd.
But by golly, it started to.
All over the place.
I told you we were completely capable of this pumpkin growing business!
I mean….please.
What do we look like….amateur gardeners?
<throat clear>
The patch was getting downright out of control, and took some redirecting the vines, or even cutting some back.
But the pumpkins were in there……everywhere!
So I hope you enjoyed all of that, because the story is about to get ugly.
We had noticed 2-3 weeks ago, that our squash garden was starting to look a little….desperate. Needy. It was struggling in some way….and I did not know why.
I googled (because Google is my other BFF), about the longevity of a squash garden in a season. I thought…with the ridiculous abundance of summer squash and zucchini it had blessed us with, maybe it just sort of depleted itself.
I get that. ; )
I kept watering it and tending to it….more out of stubbornness than anything, because really…the kids were all squashed out.
But I wanted to know what the heck was happening, because things were looking from bad to worse. I wanted to learn from it.
(Gosh I am getting mature, huh?)
Next thing I know…the Pumpkin Patch isn’t looking much better.
So, a few night’s ago, my neighbor came over. The really nice one…she and her husband are gardening extraordinaires. They have the Better Home and Gardens yardage. But they live just short of us, on a dead end street, so they don’t see our gardens without purposely coming to visit and see.
Otherwise, if they just tried to peek, they’d get caught.
Trust me. My kids don’t miss a thing.
Well, my neighbor (Peg), she was telling me that their squash gardens do the same exact thing, EVERY year! She and her husband said it was squash bugs, that were the culprit. She explained that every year, they get a really good harvest, and then BOOM…..everything starts going to pot, in a fast way. She believes it is an areal problem, from what they know. She said they had tried everything, to ward off these squash bugs, that destroy the plants at the trunk. But they have never won the battle.
Now, I was ready to let the squash garden go anyway. We ate plenty, there was plenty in the freezer all shredded, slightly blanched and ready for cold season breads and soups.
BUT MY PUMPKINS!!!! OH NOOOOOO!
I’m telling you…the patch is looking pretty bad at the moment.
I tried to take a photo, but I couldn’t see through my tears, to take the shot.
Plus, it’s just humbling.
At this point…we still have pumpkins growing. ELEVEN in fact.
But….we are desperately googling and working to get this bug infestation under control, in hopes of saving our patch.
Now that I have googled and researched so much about these squash bugs, I know what to look for next year. But I want these pumpkins we’ve got growing! I can’t lose them! So…we’re trying all kinds of things.
I do fear too, that we might have planted a tad too early. If they survive, they may be ripe before Halloween, and I know this was a long shot anyway but….Thanksgiving. So next year, we’ll know to plant later too.
But, for now, I’ll be busy saving the pumpkins, God-willing.
Because the gloves are not off. (Who knew this would happen? It wasn’t my fight to begin with!)
Ask anyone. I just don’t take a fight, laying down.
We’ll keep you posted on this sad pumpkin patch story.
Kim the Farmer <3....Thank you so much for all of these tips!! I am definitely taking note, and making a plan, for everything you say! Well except maybe the moving out West part. Although your presence, and no squash borers around, definitely tempts me!
Planting later, using row covers until they flower and making sure to get rid of all plant residue from the previous year. Also tilling your soil to bring the wintering over bugs in the soil to the top for the weather and birds to get!
Sorry for the sad story about your pumpkins…my only other suggestion is to move out West, we don’t have squash borers! Kim
Oh no Maria…I’m glad you said all of this here! Because it’s a wealth of info EVERYONE can learn from, in these comments!! You are right, I feel better going the organic route too! I WILL be tilling and planting pumpkins later next year. I am hanging on to every word, AND researching like crazy!! Thank you so much my friend!
Well, I guess you’re welcome but I’m also sorry that you have the same problems out there! ๐ Now if you want to stay organic and not use chemicals, as I do, and I bet you do too, you are sorta stuck. You can continue to plant, you’ll just deal with them every year. You will likely get zucchini in the beginning of the season, they’ll just die out early. Be sure to rotate them around, don’t plant in the same spot every year. Also, tilling deeply helps to disturb them when they burrow into the ground I’ve heard. We do that and it seems to prolong the life of my vining plants but alas they eventually find them again.
If you are not worried about using chemicals….my brother uses liquid Sevin and inserts it with a plastic syringe when he finds evidence of the saw dust at the base. That works for him and keeps his plants thriving. I prefer to just let them hang on as long as they can and then get them out of the garden as soon as they die off. I’d rather not use the chemicals. Personal preference but you deal with a lot of annoying junk when you go natural.
Planting pumpkins later in the season can help avoid the problem also. Wait until July to plant and see if they make it until October. This is my first year of trying both ways. When my first early planting started dying off in late July I planted more and so far they are going strong. We’ll see if they make it or if the bugs take over the healthy plants when they are done with the old ones.
You’re doing a great job over there friend! It’s all just learning as you go, just like I told you in the beginning right? ๐ You can’t win them all! ๐
Sorry, I should have emailed!
MARIA!!! THANK YOU for this info!! I just googled, and there is no doubt in my mind now, that you have absolutely diagnosed the squash problem here! It is NOT squash bugs, but vine borers!! After reading so much on it and looking at photos (which really made me squirm in my seat), what a gardening battle this will always be, if I want summer squash and zucchini (I do), and pumpkins (I really, really, really do!!). Thank you, for sharing your gardening expertise with us! Gardening is indeed a learning game, from experience, but also from fellow gardeners like YOU, who are willing to share and teach what they have learned. I can’t wait to tell my neighbor about this!
It’s all a learning game. We are battling the same thing here. However, if the plants suddenly just die nearly overnight, it is likely a vine borer which is even worse than a squash bug. Squash bugs will lay their eggs on the underside of the leaves. They are brownish and will all be clustered together. You can hand pick those parts of the leaves off and destroy but it’s a tough battle.
To know if you are fighting vine borers you need to check the base of the main stems. If they look like they have a saw dust type of residue mess there, it’s vine bores eating the stems from the inside. It’s a type of moth I believe that lay their eggs near the base and the larva burrow into the vine. Kills them quickly. You can slice the vine, pull out the larva and smash it, then mound dirt over the cut vine and it can repair itself and grow again.
The trouble is, if vine borers are a problem this year, they will be again next year, they will eventually burrow down into the ground when it gets cold and survive another year. Not fun.
We have had so much rain and humidity here that the white mildew is terrible and has killed off most of our plants. It has not been good gardening weather out here. Actually it has just not been a good season at all here in Iowa!
Kerry….That is an exact description of what happened to my squash plants, and pumpkin plants (which pumpkins of course are a squash variety). So I think yours must be squash bugs too. I’m mad for both of us! I do need to update. It’s not looking good! : (
very interesting in a sad sort of way. i think i must have had those squash bugs too. i didn’t plant pumpkins, but just zuchhini and yellow squash. they were growing great and producing well and then very suddenly they keeled over…right at the trunks…splitting and nasty soggy looking.
i sure hope you can conquer the culprit! keep us posted!
kerry
Oh no. I planted tomato plants this year which was amazing for me because I DO NOT have a green thumb. But they’ve been doing well despite my neglect. My mom has the huge garden and some sort of powdery mildew is what we’re googling.
Locally for us at the end of Sept. our town has a Pumpkinfest. This year we’re trying to beat our previous winner of biggest pumpkin pie. We have a local weigh off of the biggest pumpkins. I forget the winners but we’re looking at the 900 lb. range. Lots of fun because the day starts off with pumpkin pancakes and ends with the OSU football team on a big screen at the town pavilion. Google New Bremen and pumpkinfest!
Oh…I hope the pumpkins can “squash” the competition! LOL