I didn't plant squash this year. My small veggie garden just doesn't have the room for it. I did plant butternut squash one year and it essentially covered the entire fenced area of my veggie beds. I got great squash but couldn't grow anything else. So I haven't planted it again since then.
It turns out that I was growing squash this year though. A volunteer butternut squash plant grew outside the fence this year and added a fair amount of beauty to this part of the garden. I let it grow because of this and to test if the deer and other herbivores took advantage of it. They didn't as far as I can tell -- maybe a couple of nibbles but nothing significant.
Since this plant seemed to grow very slowly during the hottest part of summer and didn't really take off until late summer, I didn't expect it to set any fruit -- that wasn't my goal with it.
It turns out that there were a few squash growing under all of that foliage!
Since we've had a few strong frosts by now, the leaves have all disappeared:
This let me clearly see the squash:
If you're familiar with butternut squash, you can probably see that these are not yet ripe:
It looks like they got some freeze damage too:
So I doubt that they'll be edible. I'll keep them in the garage for a week or two and see what they look like.
I may slice into them anyway, just to give them a try.
If I don't find a way to eat these (or if they're inedible) that's fine. This plant has showed me that it is possible to grow butternut squash again in my deer-visited garden, and if all goes to plan I'll have plenty of these delicious fruits to eat next winter.
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Don't you love these volunteer plants! I had 3 or 4 winter melon volunteers this year, which I thought to be fuzzy melons until I found them keeping growing bigger and bigger. Unfortunately none matured after the stifling heat and raging cuke beetles.
ReplyDeleteI love the look of the plant, I'd grow it for the foliage alone :)
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