Courgette flowers

General tips / questions on seeding & planting

Moderators: KG Steve, Chantal, Tigger, peter

User avatar
JohnN
KG Regular
Posts: 636
Joined: Thu Jul 27, 2006 5:45 pm
Location: Hookwood, near Gatwick
Been thanked: 2 times

An aquaintance tells me that courgettes (and marrows?) start rotting from the flower down and that he always takes the flower off before this can happen. Is this so, and is it a good practice?
John N
User avatar
Tigger
KG Regular
Posts: 3212
Joined: Sun Nov 27, 2005 6:00 pm
Location: Shropshire

We always pick a few courgettes when they are small and have the flowers intact. Then we stuff them with cream cheese, herbs, chillies, whatever and deep fry in a tempura batter. You can do the same with just the flowers when they are a bit bigger.

Once you leave them on the fruit for a longer time, they will rot, so take them off.
ashb
KG Regular
Posts: 55
Joined: Mon May 07, 2012 2:48 pm
Location: newtyle,blairgowrie

-just need a bit of info, been told i could just plant these
2 courgette plants i have straight into this horse manure
ive got :? is this true or should i put them in peat free compost
that i use for my planter bags.
ash
its nice to be important
but its more important to be nice
scooter 2008
User avatar
peter
KG Regular
Posts: 5845
Joined: Fri Nov 25, 2005 1:54 pm
Location: Near Stansted airport
Has thanked: 18 times
Been thanked: 36 times
Contact:

As a student I worked on a mixed farm one summer and one of the old boys had some trailing marrow plants on top of the slurry pit back of the cowshed. Used a plank to get to them, literally all the cow muck pushed along the, bare concrete floor by tractor and out a chute into the pit, no bedding of any sort.

When we emptied it end of august it was about twenty foot deep. :shock:
Do not put off thanking people when they have helped you, as they may not be there to thank later.

I support http://www.hearingdogs.org.uk/
User avatar
Johnboy
KG Regular
Posts: 5824
Joined: Tue Nov 22, 2005 1:15 pm
Location: NW Herefordshire

Hi Peter,
Not exactly Courgettes but along the same lines.
In the drought year of 1976 I grew potatoes on a gentle slope below about 2000 tons of manure and used potatoes for seed that had fallen through the riddle and sowed them along the rows like peas. The crop was absolutely extraordinary. By far the best yield I have ever had or ever likely to have again. The only maintenance was to pull up the Fat Hen before it was able to seed. The constant drainage from the manure did a fantastic job constantly feeding and constantly watering underground.
JB.
User avatar
FelixLeiter
KG Regular
Posts: 830
Joined: Tue Apr 28, 2009 12:18 pm
Location: East Yorkshire

To answer your question, JohnN, there is no harm in removing the flower, but be sure the flower has actually wilted before you do so. If you take the flower off while it is still fresh, you risk breaking the end of the fruit and that could lead to rotting, also. I'm not entirely convinced that this practise reduces rotting; if the weather's cold and wet, they seem to rot from the end regardless. But the fruits do not always rot completely, the portion nearest the stem can often remain intact and harvestable.
Allotment, but little achieved.
Post Reply Previous topicNext topic