MELON HALES BEST JUMBO AB
Cucumis melo
Hales Best Jumbo melon is an early heirloom variety producing elongated fruits that can weigh up to 1.5 kg, with dark green embroidered skin and salmon-colored flesh with a deliciously sweet flavor.
Charentais type cantaloupe variety .
How to successfully sow melons
Sowing melons in pots
Melons need a lot of heat (between 24 and 35°C) and light to germinate. The temperature during the day should therefore be within this range and not drop below 15°C at night. Ideally, you should sow your melons in a hotbed or heated greenhouse in March/April and replant them in the garden after the risk of frost has passed, i.e. in mid-May .
Sow 2 or 3 seeds (point down) per pot filled with fine seed compost at a depth of 1 cm. Water regularly to keep the compost moist (but not soggy) with a sprayer. Place next to a window or in full light. Once the seedlings have emerged, the need for light is even greater, so make sure to place them in a very sunny spot.
Remove the weakest plants and keep only the most vigorous ones.
Melon sowing in place
Another solution, more commonly used by people living in the south of France or in a Mediterranean climate , is to sow directly in the ground.
Space each future melon plant 80 cm to 1 m apart, place 2 to 3 seeds per pocket (1.5 cm deep) and cover with a mixture of sieved garden soil and mature compost . Protect the seedlings with a cloche or a frame at the start of cultivation. Keep only the best-looking plant.
Melon planting
Depending on the region, you can plant young melon plants in the garden between April and mid-June. We recommend keeping a plastic tunnel at the beginning of the growing season to provide more heat. If you don't live in the south, we strongly recommend using a heated greenhouse for growing melons and watermelons. Make sure to keep a spacing of 80 cm to 1 m between each plant.
Melons will appreciate a warm location, a sunny exposure, rich and deep soil rich in potash . Do not hesitate to loosen the soil a little before planting and add a little compost.
Association with the vegetable garden
In the vegetable garden, melon will get along well with most vegetables, except cucumber and squash .
Melon cultivation
It should be noted that the new varieties do not require pruning, except for topping (cutting the head). As soon as the plant has formed 4 or 6 leaves, the main stem is pruned: this allows for rapid branching and greater fruiting.
Watering should be regular but limited; flooding your crops would reduce their taste. Do not wet the foliage when watering, otherwise powdery mildew may develop.
Weed in the weeks following planting to avoid competition, then mulch when the soil is warm, at the end of June or beginning of July.
Remove any leaves that hide the fruit, as the fruit needs to receive maximum sunlight.
Place wooden boards or tiles under the fruit to protect it from soil moisture and to provide extra warmth.
Melon harvest
Harvest the fruit about 2-3 months after transplanting it into the garden. Note its color, which generally fades, and its stalk, which should appear to be starting to peel off effortlessly.
You will also smell its fragrance more pronounced.
Don't store it in the refrigerator, which would destroy its delicious aromas. Fully ripe fruits can be identified by their small crevice around the edge of the stem, a sign that the melon will soon detach.
Melon diseases
Melons are very susceptible to cucurbit mildew , leaf spot and powdery mildew . It is essential to avoid watering the foliage at the end of the day, especially in hot and humid weather (summer storms), because mildew contamination occurs on wet foliage. At the end of the season, you can install a tile or board under each melon to protect them from moisture.
The main pests are aphids and seed flies . To avoid fly attacks, plant when temperatures are high enough to allow rapid plant growth.
