You cant help but fall in love with these diminutive watermelon looking fruits; they are fun, interesting to grow and they have the tiniest, dainty flowers. Crunch into them and they have a cucumber like taste with a lemony-lime burst. The Mexican Sour Gherkin Cucumber is easy to grow, having rampant vines, best grown on a trellis or in hanging baskets and easily ignored by pests. Harvest when they are smaller than a grape; the bigger they get the more sour citrus flavor they get. Eat them raw as a snack and in salads or preserve by pickling. The Mexican Sour Gherkin Cucumber is native to central America and also known as mouse melon, sandita, cucamelon.
20 seeds
PLANTING
(Melothria scabra)
Germination:4-10 days
Germination Temperature:Optimum soil temperatures 70-85F
Seed Sowing Depth:1/2-1″ deep
Sowing Indoors:3-4 weeks before last frost.Provide70-85Fsoil temperature.Sow 2-3 seeds per cell/pot.Sowing into individual biodegradable peat/cow pots reduces rootdamage when transplanting. Transplant 36-48″ apart after last frost.
Sowing Outdoors:Sow after last frostwhen soil temperature is over70F.Sow a few seeds every 36-48″.
Harvest:Check andpick every day to keep the harvest flowing.
Tips:The Mexican Sour Gherkin Cucumber should be planted in fertile soil, amended with compost or well rotted manure and kept well watered. Trellising the vines allows for good air circulation, takes up less space and provides shade for heat sensitive crops like lettuce. They benefit from growing on black plastic and by using row covers for weed, insect control, and more rapid growth.
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