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Row 7 Organic Honeypatch Squash Seeds

Row 7 Organic Honeypatch Squash Seeds

Row 7

In stock

Regular price $4.95
Regular price Sale price $4.95
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Bred to reimagine the workaday butternut, the Honeypatch packs concentrated sweetness, flavor and beta-carotene into a single-serving squash.

Plant Details:

  • 12 seeds per packet
  • produced in New York and Oregon
  • Fruit: 5-6" long mini butternuts; 0.5-1 lbs. Short vine, 4-5' long
  • Maturity: 110 days
  • Organic

Field Notes:

  • Soil Requirements: Fertile, well-drained soils.
  • Row Covers: Cover young plants to increase early growth and protect from insect pests. Remove covers at flowering to ensure pollination and fruit set.
  • Spacing after Thinning/Transplanting
  • Plant Spacing: 24”
  • Row Spacing: 7’

Direct Seeding

  • Sow seeds ½” deep after last frost, when soil temperatures reach at least 70˚F.
  • Sow 1-2 seeds every 24”; thin to one plant every 24”.
  • 6-12 days to emergence.

Transplanting

  • Start seeds indoors 2-3 weeks before last frost. Sow seeds ½” deep. Optimal temperature for germination is 70-90˚F.
  • Move transplants outdoors to harden off gradually for 3-5 days, protecting seedlings from wind, strong sun, hard rain and cold.
  • Transplant outdoors after last frost, when soil temperatures reach at least 70˚F. Do not disturb roots when transplanting.

Harvest

  • The Honeypatch reaches maximum sweetness when allowed to stay on the vine. It’s ready to pick when the rind darkens and the green lines around the stem recede. Harvest twice as fruit ripen for optimal yield and quality. (If in danger of frost, harvest all fruit.) Handle fruit gently to prevent damage.

Storage

  • Fruit store well after curing. Cure at about 80˚F for one week. Store at 50˚F, 50% relative humidity, with air exchange for best storage. Higher humidity, up to 70%, can lengthen storage. Plan to use all by February. Monitor storage for fruit loss.

Pest + Disease Info

  • Insect Pests: Cucumber beetles, squash bugs, and aphids. Pyrethrin, spinosad, soaps, row cover, or Blue Hubbard trap crops help prevent damage. Check undersides of leaves for eggs. Use best management practices such as crop rotation and removal of crop debris post-harvest to deter insect population growth.
  • Diseases: Protect from powdery mildew. For fruit rots (anthracnose, scab, fusarium), bacterial wilt, and viruses such as cucumber mosaic virus, maintain good air circulation and schedule watering to allow plants to dry fully.
About Row 7:
Co-founded by renowned chef Dan Barber (Blue Hill at Stone Barns), Row 7 is dedicated to breeding organically grown, non-GMO seeds that prioritize unmatched flavor, nutrition, and sustainability.
These exceptional varieties are featured in some of the country’s best restaurants and now you can grow them at home! Designed to thrive in gardens and perform beautifully in your kitchen, we think these will be welcome additions to your growing and cooking experience. 
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