Although it is from a Colorado grower, the Halona Melon is thought of as an Eastern Type cantaloupe. This means that it does well in cooler weather and shorter growing seasons. The heavily netted fruit can grow to 4-5 lbs. with good yields and intermediate disease resistance to powdery mildew and fusarium wilt.The Halona melon is thick fleshed with a small seed cavity, Halona is a sweet treat to eat, the result of a very high brix rating.
20 seeds
PLANTING
Cucumis melo
Germination:4-10 days
Germination Temperature:Optimum soil temperatures 70-85F
Seed Sowing Depth:1/2″ deep
Sowing Indoors:3-4 weeks before last frost.Provide 70-85Fsoil temperature.Sow 2-3 seeds per cell/pot.Sowing into individual biodegradable peat/cow pots reduces rootdamage when transplanting. Transplant after last frost,36″ apart.
Sowing Outdoors: Sow after last frostwhen soil temperature is over70F.Sow 2-3 seeds every 36″, thin to the strongest seedling.
How much does a packet plant:18-20foot single row,5-6hills
Harvest:Look for the following signs as it does take some practice on telling when they are ready to harvest. The skin tone changes and netting becomes heavy, the ends soften, they will slip from the vines or a gentle tug will pull it away from the vine, a crack develops around the stem, the closest tendril to the stem dries, and the aroma increases when ripe.
Tips: Plant Halona Melon in fertile soil, amended with compost or well rotted manure and keep well watered. They benefit from growing on black plastic and by using row covers for weed, insect control, and more rapid growth.
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