As many of you know, cucumbers are one of my absolute
favorite things in the garden. Of course so are peppers! And tomatoes! And the
herbs! But I digress. There’s just nothing like the crisp, sweet, delicate
flavor of a freshly picked homegrown cucumber. It will spoil you though, and
those watery logs you buy at the store just won’t seem the same.
|
Sikkim Cucumber plant |
This year I am growing 3 varieties: Marketmore, Lemon, and Sikkim. Lemons
I have grown before, and if you’ve never tried them I highly recommend them.
They are large vines that produce round fruit roughly the size of a lime, but
as they mature they turn from an ivory color to a dark yellow (thus the name
“lemon”). Contrary to their namesake they are a slightly sweet cucumber—perfect
for munching or adding to a salad. I prefer to harvest them before they turn
dark yellow, as the skin will get tough and if you let them go long enough the fruit
will get a bit tough as well. They also make incredible pickles because they
hold their crispness well.
The other two types are new to me this year. Ever year since
I have had a garden I have grown Straight 8 cucumbers, but as you know from
reading the blog they were absolutely inundated with powdery mildew every
summer. After fighting the mildew with sprays, tonics, home remedies, and
aggressive pruning I decided to search out a mildew resistant variety, which
led me to the Marketmore.
|
Lemon Cucumber |
So far I have harvested one Marketmore cucumber, and it was
tasty. It was probably about 7 inches long, and I think it would have kept
growing had I let it. The favor was good (a bit strong) and the skin is tough,
so this is one you’ll probably want to peel. The flavor probably mellows and
becomes sweeter as they mature, so I am going to see how big the next few get. There
are two things I love about this plant. One, it gets HUGE. As you can see from
the picture below it is growing up the side of the house (I have 3 plants in a
7 gallon pot). It quickly grew to the top of the tomato cage and began its
ascent toward the roof. It is also quite a heavy yielder, as there are probably
20-25 cucumbers on the plant between 3 and 5 inches long, and 2-3 that are
around 7 inches. It is also loaded with flowers and very small cukes, so we’ll
be making some pickles!
Perhaps equally important: not a single spore of my powdery
nemesis! I can tell you without hesitation that this plant is mildew resistant,
as my Straight 8 cukes would be dead by now (or close to it) without constant
spraying and pruning. I have done absolutely nothing to control or prevent
mildew this year, and the plants are extremely healthy and productive. I did
see a few leaves with the early signs of mildew on the bottom of the Lemon
cucumber plant, but I just pruned them off and I haven’t noticed more. That is
right next to the Marketmore (and even growing intertwined with it) and there
have been absolutely no signs of it spreading.
|
Lemon Cucumber (left) and Marketmore Cucumber (right) |
Last but not least, one of my “I have to try that!” plants:
the Sikkim Cucumber. What a cool looking fruit! The plant looks like any other
cucumber, and the young cucumbers look like any other young cucumber. I was
starting to wonder if I got the wrong seeds. However, as the fruits mature they
begin to turn yellowish orange, and eventually are covered in a melon-like
brown skin. That’s when they are ready (although I have read you can eat them
anytime). The one in the photo below is just starting to develop the
cantaloupe-like skin that makes these distinctive. Once I harvest expect a fill
write up! I can also vouch for the mildew resistance of the Sikkim, as I
have seen no mildew at all. Again, this is with no special steps taken to
prevent it.
|
Tiny Sikkim Cuke (bottom) and larger Sikkim cucumber just starting to develop its distinctive color and skin pattern |
In terms of container size and watering, you will want a
large container. The bigger the better. Cucumbers get huge and need a lot of
water, which is why you want a large container. The more dirt the more water it
can hold for the plants, and the more nutrients are available as well. I have
mine in 7 gallon pots, but that is because I live upstairs so I am wary of
using pots that are too heavy. I would rather use two 7 gallon pots and grow 2
different kinds of cucumbers than one 14 gallon pot and only get to try one. A
7 gallon pot is still quite large and I have to water the cucumbers every day
unless it pours (a little sprinkle will barely wet the dirt as the leaves form
a tight canopy). A bigger container would mean less watering and probably even
larger plants. I also use a tomato cage for the vines to climb because I use
round pots, although a trellis could also work if you used something longer and
narrower.
I typically water every night, and I am very careful to
water only the dirt in order to keep the plants dry. Wet conditions are
wonderful for mildew, and as we’ve been through already there are few garden
problems I can’t treat or deal with, but mildew seems to be one of them. So
keep the leaves dry by watering just the dirt. Plus, once the cucumbers get as
big as you see in the photos above, watering the leaves will result in most of
the water running off onto the deck and never making it to the thirsty roots.
One final note on watering: don’t worry if you skip a day
and find your cucumbers wilted. They will wilt, and sometimes so badly you
think you’ve killed the plant. This happened to me today in fact. Since it
rained yesterday I skipped my daily watering. This morning I went out to find
the lemon cucumber so wilted I thought it was dead! I quickly watered the plant
and within an hour it was back to looking like nothing happened. Don’t let this
become a habit though. It weakens the plant (which invites the mildew) and can
result in bitter cucumbers.
|
A developing Lemon Cucumber! |
People often wonder how often to fertilize. I fertilize with Tomato Tone early
in the season, and then switch to Miracle Gro tomato food (the pink powder) as
the summer progresses. I fertilize with the Miracle Gro once every 10 days or
so, but I go light on the mix—probably ½ of what it calls for. If I ever see a
particular plant getting lime green I use some of the typical blue Miracle Gro
plant food for a quick boost of nitrogen. Within a week it will be dark green
again. I follow this regimen for the entire garden: cucumbers, tomatoes,
peppers, and eggplants get the pink Miracle Gro. Cooking greens, herbs and
flowers get the blue Miracle Gro (since the cooking greens and flowers don’t
fruit). You can use one fertilizer for everything and be fine too; I just
happen to have both since I have a lot of houseplants as well.
To sum up: grow cucumbers in your container garden! They are
fun, very easy, heavy yielding, and there are countless varieties out there.
Choose a variety that is mildew resistant. If you are in an area susceptible to
powdery mildew avoid Straight 8 (as much as I love them) because you will have
issues with it, and once it gets settled into your garden and kills off your Straight
8’s it finds a lot of other plants to infest that it might have otherwise
passed over. And use a pot no smaller than 7 gallons for best results. A bigger
pot buys you more of a buffer for water and nutrients, which is a tremendous
benefit when you can’t always be home to water your plants every day.
Until next time, happy gardening!