Home What's New Message Board
BigPumpkins.com
Select Destination Site Search

Message Board

 
Watermelon Growing Forum

Subject:  hollow melons

Watermelon Growing Forum      Return to Board List

From

Location

Message

Date Posted

Chill

Indiana

I cut open one of my smaller melons for the church devotional today and it had a pretty decent gap inside.
Anyway I was wondering how common this is and how to prevent it from happening?

9/21/2014 9:54:03 PM

Spence***

Home of happy lil plants

Just about all of today's melon have a certain extent of the hollow gap inside some paper thin some have the whole melon nearly, aaverage is 1-2in gap inside... that is IF there is a such thing is an average.melon

9/22/2014 4:13:22 AM

Smoky Mtn Pumpkin (Team GWG)

sevierville, Tn

some you can put a basketball inside the hole ! i wish it was only 1-2 inches ;)

9/22/2014 6:32:54 AM

Chill

Indiana

Hopefully the one I'm bringing to the weigh off isn't to bad.

9/25/2014 1:02:49 AM

tallcorn

Linden, Mi.,

Hoping here for the best as well !
Weigh one, had 40 lbs. of air !

9/25/2014 12:39:04 PM

brotherdave

Corryton, TN

I've asked the same question several times.
Croley bend sent me this link, by the way thanks:
http://extension.udel.edu/weeklycropupdate/?p=7484

A couple points of interest to me were the 3rd paragraph and the last.

9/30/2014 10:15:03 AM

brotherdave

Corryton, TN

I do believe the problem is the same in seeded and seedless. This year I had a commercial patch across the driveway from my competition plants. Zero hollow hearts in the commercial patch. All hollow again in the competition to varying degrees.



This is the first year that I had issues with exploding rinds, for lack of a better term, in my commercial melons. Touch them with a knife and BAM they would split open nearly completely at times. Three different varieties and seeds were from the same packs that I've used for a couple years. Dated for use in 2011. No issues with exploding in previous years. This years crop was easily 15% larger on average in individual melon size. Very little disease pressure until melons were ripe. Previous years I have always had issues. Numbers of melons was through the ceiling. Gave a bunch to shelters and schools and still didn't harvest 50% of crop.



Competition patch had the same old disease/health issues, hollow hearts and much smaller than expected results. This patch actually got 2 sprayings where as commercial got zero. More consistent watering here.

9/30/2014 10:22:20 AM

brotherdave

Corryton, TN

Reasons and hypothesis:

In the spring I prepared the competition patch as normal using recommendations from Western Labs. I applied what was recommended.



Commercial patch was prepared for sweet corn using recommendations from the same lab. Decided to move the corn to another location and plant melons in the prepared spot. Had the lab send me new recommendations for melons based on the first test to see if anything else was needed. Nope. Recommendation were a LOT lower than what had already been applied for several nutrients. Planted anyway and the plants looked weird (crinkled leaves) until they started to vine.



I think the soil may need to be jacked up more than recommended on the front end especially.



I have noticed when cross cutting culls there is quite often a hollow heart. Even when they are only finger length. This seems to confirm what the article has mentioned near the end. It makes me wonder if these plants might need a little extra juice during the earliest development of the females.

Just my 2 cents.

9/30/2014 10:25:35 AM

brotherdave

Corryton, TN

Should have said more consistent watering in competition patch.

9/30/2014 10:32:40 AM

Chill

Indiana

That was a very interesting article, I think it will be pretty helpful. Thank you very much brotherdave.

10/1/2014 2:15:25 AM

Total Posts: 10 Current Server Time: 9/27/2024 5:23:01 PM
 
Watermelon Growing Forum      Return to Board List
  Note: Sign In is required to reply or post messages.
 
Top of Page

Questions or comments? Send mail to Ken AT bigpumpkins.com.
Copyright © 1999-2024 BigPumpkins.com. All rights reserved.