SQWIB
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Cantaloupe ID Needed

I had a heck of a time getting my Cantaloupe seeds to germinate and in the process bought new seeds and was just dumping seeds randomly.
Now I am confused as to what is what.
From What my little brain will allow me to remember, I recall planting Hale's Best and Hearts of Gold.

The plant on the hill, first pics is coming along nicely.

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The plant under the deck has me confused. The leaves and flowers are huge! I also believe it has been a SVB vacation spot, so I'm just letting it go to see what\t happens,
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I want to save seeds from the one on the hill if its an Heirloom, is there a rule of thumb or procedure for seed saving from cantaloupe

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applestar
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There might be other methods, but here’s my method for saving cucurbit seeds —

- I wash in colander or strainer depending on seed size, rubbing off the gel and placenta, then dump in deep bowl/bucket of soapy water to rinse and pour off floaters. I don’t try to ferment - they sprout too easily.

- I only save seeds that sink and stay sunk. — immediately strain, rinse well, shake and wipe off excess moisture from outside of the strainer/colander, (dab seeds with towel or paper towel if necessary — I sometimes crumple paper towel balls and bury in the seeds to soak up some water) and then spread the seeds out in single layer to dry, preferably in front of a fan.

- Once thoroughly dry, pack away — I add some hort/ag grade DE (diatomaceous earth) in case some bug decides to sneak in.

SQWIB
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applestar wrote:There might be other methods, but here’s my method for saving cucurbit seeds —

- I wash in colander or strainer depending on seed size, rubbing off the gel and placenta, then dump in deep bowl/bucket of soapy water to rinse and pour off floaters. I don’t try to ferment - they sprout too easily.

- I only save seeds that sink and stay sunk. — immediately strain, rinse well, shake and wipe off excess moisture from outside of the strainer/colander, (dab seeds with towel or paper towel if necessary — I sometimes crumple paper towel balls and bury in the seeds to soak up some water) and then spread the seeds out in single layer to dry, preferably in front of a fan.

- Once thoroughly dry, pack away — I add some hort/ag grade DE (diatomaceous earth) in case some bug decides to sneak in.

Do you have to let the fruit get over ripe like eggplants for harvesting seeds?

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applestar
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No no because you eat melons when fully ripened. Eggplants are eaten when seeds are immature, like okra.

Among cucurbits, it’s cucumbers and zucchini/summer squash that you would have to intentionally ripen fully beyond the immature eating stage.

SQWIB
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OK So when I harvest the cantaloupe and cut open to eat, I can just save the seeds and I'm good.
Remove seeds, clean seeds in collander, dry seeds and store?

For the butternut squash can I do the same or should I leave one squash on the vine until the plants dead?

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applestar
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Butternut squash (and seeds) is ripe when skin is hard to the thumbnail test. Even not quite ripe harvested and cured indoors will ripen with viable seeds.



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