The versatile cucumber (cucumis sativus) is tasty pickled, in a salad, as a salad, in a sandwich, or just eaten raw. How to grow cucumbers depends largely in part on how you plan to eat them.
Cucumbers come in over 120
varieties that
range from small picklers to large slicers and from dark
green to the yellow of the lemon cucumber. They come “burped” or burp less,
seeded or without seeds.
Originating in India where they have been cultivated for over 3,000 years, the cucumber is a quick growing subtropical vine. In fact, many varieties of cucumber are ready to harvest after 50 days. However, some gardeners shy away from learning how to grow cucumbers because of their peculiar pollination habits.
The traditional cucumber produces both a male
(staminate) and a female (pistillate) blossom. Male blossoms appear first
and soon drop from the vine without bearing fruit. However, the vines soon
bloom again with both male and female flowers and continue blooming
throughout the growing season. Cucumber vines bear fruit in abundance as
long as you harvest them before they reach full maturity.
Relatives of squash, melons, and pumpkins, there are a
variety of ways to grow them. Grow them in hills, in rows along a wire
trellis, or train your cucumber vines to climb a wall or wooden trellis.
In
addition to growing directly in the garden, cucumbers make an attractive
container plant. The cucumber is an appealing plant with lovely blossoms
that permeate the air with the heady fragrance of — what else? — cucumbers!
When getting ready to grow cucumbers in your garden, it’s best
to prepare the soil about a month ahead of planting them. These plants are not
good at competing for space and nutrients.
Remove weeds and spade in rich
organic material. You’ll have plenty of time to do this, since cucumbers are
subtropical vines that prefer the sunny days and balmy nights of summertime.
Seeds need about an 80F temperature to germinate, but then will do so in
four to five days. Although seeds can be planted directly into the garden,
cucumbers can also be started indoors for transplanting. If you use peat
pots to start the seed, you can bury the whole pot in the garden lessening
the risk that you’ll damage the tender vines.
Once established, in addition to keeping the fruit cleaner, a layer of mulch
in your cucumber patch minimizes weed growth and helps your soil retain
moisture. Although cucumbers hate wet feet and won’t grow in standing water,
the more moisture they can absorb the juicier and sweeter they will be.
Harvest cucumbers at whatever size you like, as long as you don’t wait for
them to turn yellow (unless they are a yellow variety). Once they begin to
turn yellow, they’re past their prime. Flavor turns bitter and the fruit
begins to dry out. Besides, frequently picking your cukes will promote more
prolific blossoming resulting in larger harvests.