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Old June 21, 2013   #31
Tormato
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sounds good gary. so Tetsukabuto is a maxima?

tom
Tetsukabuto (F1 hybrid) is a maxima x moschata cross. It needs either a maxima or a moschata to pollinate it. My guess is that you'd never cross it with a maxima.

I've never looked at the vines to see if they are solid, because I've never had a SVB attack it, unlike all of the maximas and pepos that I trial.

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Old June 21, 2013   #32
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thanks gary.

i grew seminole last summer and it was not what i like. it is way to wet inside and the flavor was not as good as waltham butternut but the buggers kept a month longer than wbn and was still sweet, such that is it.

i don't know if all butternuts taste the same but i suspect some are different. i never grew any but wbn as it does so well.

i always will grow wbn so i'll have a moschata for pollination but i wouldn't grow any maximas thanks to the svb. if you'd like to share a few seeds of tetsukabuto i'll try it next summer to see what the difference is vs wbn. if not that's ok too.

i have 1 question. if i did grow tetsukabuto and wbn i suspect the seeds of tetsukabuto will not come true to type since tetsukabuto is a hybrid. is that correct?

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Old June 22, 2013   #33
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No Tom, it would not come true. Tetsukabuto F1 seed looks like a maxima (white type). When it gets pollinated by a moschata, the new seed looks like a moschata (hairy edge type). Currently I'm all out of Tetsukabuto. Hopefully Pinetree will list it again next year.

But what I'm really hoping for is that one of the other Japanese moschatas I'm trialing (Kikuza, Futtsu Black, Yokohama, etc...) will be all that I'm looking for in an OP squash.

Gary

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Old June 22, 2013   #34
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Hopefully Pinetree will list it again next year.

But what I'm really hoping for is that one of the other Japanese moschatas I'm trialing (Kikuza, Futtsu Black, Yokohama, etc...) will be all that I'm looking for in an OP squash.

Gary

Kitazawa carries Tetsukabuto. But I got mine from you.... It is by far the largest, most vigorous vine in my squash patch (wish it would settle down a bit).

And will you let us know how your other Japanese moschatas come out, please?
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Old June 23, 2013   #35
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ok gary i always buy from pinetree so i'll check next year for it.

tom
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Old July 29, 2013   #36
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Test post
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Old July 29, 2013   #37
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Welcome. Introduce yourself in the Townhall forum and more people will say hi.
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Old September 10, 2013   #38
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After pulling my squash due to borers I read that the adult is only active in early spring/summer so I replanted. Everything was fine, looked good. Started getting nice squash.

So why am I having to pull these yesterday? Dug into the vine and there they were.

Borers in September????????
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Old September 10, 2013   #39
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After pulling my squash due to borers I read that the adult is only active in early spring/summer so I replanted. Everything was fine, looked good. Started getting nice squash.

So why am I having to pull these yesterday? Dug into the vine and there they were.

Borers in September????????
I grew a second crop of them this year, also......

'Bout to give up on squash.
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Old September 10, 2013   #40
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Did you have borers in your second crop too?
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Old September 10, 2013   #41
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Did you have borers in your second crop too?
Yup. Couldn't believe it.
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Old September 10, 2013   #42
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I started a second crop and they are just now bearing...and there are vine borers in these, too. I am so bumming!
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Old September 11, 2013   #43
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I have found in the past when I tried a fall crop with squash that the vine borers were worse than in the spring.

Bill
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Old September 11, 2013   #44
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That was what happened here, too. Second crop had more damage earlier than the first planting. I'm going to change things up a little next year and see if that helps. I'm going to double my number of crookneck plants to try to get more. As for zucchini, I'm going to try the variety "Dark Green" because it's supposed to ripen all its fruit in a more concentrated time. I'm hoping to get a lot of zucchini early and by the time the SVB damage gets bad (usually mid July here), those plants will pretty much be done anyway. That's my plan. We'll see how it works.
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Old September 11, 2013   #45
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I also lost most of my plants to them. I'm going to use heavier methods next year -- couldn't this year because I have a toddler.

All of my affected plants were in containers in a scrubby corner of the yard. One was three feet off the ground!

The ones in the back of the yard, in the raised beds surrounded by grass, haven't been affected so far.

Next year I'll plant twice as much, and scatter them around more widely. I happen to think squash and pumpkins and cucumber plants are quite ornamental.
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