Well, doesn't that just beat all? I cut the latest open and it looks about 2-3 weeks from being ready. Durnit!!!!
Does anybody have a sure fire way to tell when a melon is ripe?
Tall.......
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Well, doesn't that just beat all? I cut the latest open and it looks about 2-3 weeks from being ready. Durnit!!!!
Does anybody have a sure fire way to tell when a melon is ripe?
Tall.......
Ok, so, this time I patiently waited through some more heat (+100) for a few days and then it dropped into the mid 90's and the last two weeks we've had rain, rain, rain because of a stalled low pressure mass hovering directly over north central Texas. I've been checking my melons almost daily, and I think what may have been my problem is that I wasn't leaving them alone. I kept turning them over to check for the creamy belly and when I did that, I probably disturbed something. So anyway, I was on my way home last night after reffing a football game and I followed a truck pulling a trailer loaded with long watermelons. So, if a farmer knows it's time, I thought maybe I'd harvest mine and see. I still have two more maturing, but I'll let those get a little heavier, first. You can see in the pictures I also have a second round of cherry tomatoes and finally my jalapenos are producing.
I'm gonna throw these in the fridge overnight and I'll cut 'em tomorrow.
More later.....
Tall.........
Crap! (I hope I can say that.... sorry, Newt) So I cut into them. The oldest, is amost mealy, just on the cusp (pic 1 and 4), but it's very sweet. I'll claim that as a good melon, therefore the first 1 of 3. The second one, although, had a creamy bottom weighed in at almost 10 pounds - extremely heavy for a sugar baby melon. However, after audibly cracking open to the knife, the meat still appeared to need an nother 2 weeks to month to fully mature. So, I'll give that a disappointing /1/ on the three scale. The last one (pic 3) was nowhere ready, even though it looked the ripest of all of them. Sadness. Oh well, I have many more years to learn. 2 more to harvest, fall is setting in and we'll see how the melons respond and how much longer the vines lives.
Peace, y'all!
Tall.......
Look for the tendril closest to the melon stem. A tendril is curly and looks like a pig's tail. When it turns brown and dries up you can harvest then or wait up to one more week for peak flavor.
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