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Garden Guide: 3 problems with squash and zucchini plants

If you’re growing these tasty veggies but aren’t getting much from them, there could be a quick fix.

Alex Calamia

Jun 26, 2024, 6:55 AM

Updated

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Blossom end rot

  • The tips of the fruit are black and mushy.

  • The problem is an issue with calcium absorption which is sometimes caused by irregular watering.

  • Add calcium to the soil with produces like bonemeal or install a drip irrigation line so plants can drink water slow and steady.

Flowers but no fruit

  • If you are getting lots of flowers but no fruit, it could be because your plant is too young.

  • Zucchini plants produce male flowers about 8 weeks before the female flowers develop. Then they will produce male and female flowers simultaneously for the rest of the summer.

  • Male flowers have long and skinny stems. Female flowers are usually larger, closer to the stem, and have a small immature zucchini behind the bloom that looks like a thicker stem.

Sudden death

  • if your healthy plant suddenly starts to wilt and die, the problem is probably a bug called squash vine borer. These moths lay their eggs inside zucchini stems and the caterpillars eat their way through the plant.

  • Usually the plant will have damage close to the soil line that almost looks like rot.

  • The best treatment is prevention. Lay a mesh cloth over your plants in June. This is the month these moths are most active in our area.

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