Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.Carmela Jaimes cruz
Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2025
Estas semillas germinaron todas !! Si buscas buenas y excelentes semillas , estas son las indicadas !! Ame el resultado !! 💚🌱🌱
Bruce trier
Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2025
They ALLl came up. Awesome 👍
Tim Wolfgram
Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2025
Can't wit to plant!!!
Wylie Wiggins
Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2025
4 out of 4 seeds have germinated and are progressing well. These look to be productive seeds so far, although a powder mildew did take hold on one leaf so far.
Betty
Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2025
6 of 6 seeds germinated and are growing quickly. I’ve already potted them up and at this rate they should be huge by the time I put them in the ground.
rachelle rankin
Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2025
I am growing these hydroponically and this plant really took off!!! Very happy, can’t wait to get eat the zucchini from this. This picture is less than two months from seed to bush!!
MICHELLE B.
Reviewed in the United States on November 23, 2024
opened seed packet and seeds were dried and crushed. Was literally a package of dust
CBA
Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2021
I planted a few seeds a month ago, and all sprouted within a week. If yours aren't germinating, here's what I did: I planted each in in a plastic cup with drainage holes, using potting mix, with some clear round lids (the kind that come with milkshakes). I put them outside in an area with partial sun, during warm weather. As soon as they sprouted I removed the lids. Once I saw three leaves on each plant (about a week after germination), I transplanted them, being careful not to damage the roots.Once they're hardened off, these plants LOVE the sun. I put one in an area where it gets tons of sun, including hot afternoon sun, and that one is already huge only a month in. The female blossoms all have round little squash, though none have bloomed yet. I put the other plants in less sunny areas, and they're noticeably smaller. Will update after some fruit starts setting.Also, I read that this variety is more pest resistant than standard zucchini varieties, but I have found squash vine borer eggs on it, so the jury is still out on that one. The stem did get thick really fast, so maybe that will offer some protection. Will update later in the season to say how pest resistant it seems.Update: A month after the first female blossom bloomed, still no zucchinis. While the vine borers didn't kill the plant, they did lay *lots* of eggs on it, so I spent a lot of time searching for and removing the eggs. Cucumber beetles also LOVE this plant. When the first female blossom opened I hand-pollinated it early in the morning... and yet the fruit never set. After that, all of the female blossoms shriveled without even blooming. However, I had the same problem with a lot of my regular zucchini plants, do I don't think it has anything to do with the seeds. We had a lot of humid weather, so maybe that was the problem. The plant still produces tons of male flowers, so at least it's providing pollen for other summer squash varieties.If you want a plant that's more resistant to pests and fungus, I've had better luck with lemon squash. They don't grow as fast as this variety, but they're less bushy, so fewer places for fungus and pests to hide.
Recommended Products