This is the first year that I did a lot of melons. I have Sucre de tour ( I think that's right), Canary, Tip Top, Angel, Amy, Honeydew, and Charantais. I'm getting a lot of melons and know how to judge when muskmelons are ripe but I don't know about the cantaloupes, rock melons, etc.
Do all melons slip on the vine when ripe?
LoreD
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This was determined by the courts rather than the botanists.LoreD wrote:Thank you, Franco. I did know that, just like botanically speaking tomatoes are fruits. I posted it here because I felt it was more likely to get a response rather than in the area with the apple and cherry trees.
LoreD
Their was a tax on fruits and vegatables at the time. The tax was different on fruits than it was on vegatables. The courts deterimined that tomatoes are vegatables so that the higher tax rate could be used.
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About 4 inches from the melon will be a small curly vine, when that vine dries up and turns brown the melon should be ripe. I am not sure if all melons have this but I know watermelons do.LoreD wrote:This is the first year that I did a lot of melons. I have Sucre de tour ( I think that's right), Canary, Tip Top, Angel, Amy, Honeydew, and Charantais. I'm getting a lot of melons and know how to judge when muskmelons are ripe but I don't know about the cantaloupes, rock melons, etc.
Do all melons slip on the vine when ripe?
LoreD