This squash plant is bushy and fairly compact. The Buttercup Burgess is a relatively early maturing winter squash. A great squash that keeps well. Good sweet flesh.
An old time favorite and great for markets. Produces high yields and is easy to grow. Benning's Green Tint is a scallop-shaped fruit with deliciously tender and good quality flesh.
This variety is perfect for small spaces. This variety is great picked small and used as summer squash, or let ripen and use for winter storage. White bush-type acorn. The fruits are white and on the large side for an acorn, weighing in at 2-3 lb.
The inside will be very tender with a creamy consistency. The perfect time to pick the Yellow crookneck is when its young and about 6 inches in size. A perfect summer squash, with a mild, sweet and full flavor taste.
In 1938, Early Prolific Straightneck was an All-American Selection winner. Harvest this squash at 12-14 inches long but are more tender and succulent when they are 5-6 inches long.
Plant as soon as soil temperatures reach 65 degrees to ensure maturity in 90-100 days. Short, wide fruits are slightly larger, sweet and nutty and more meaty than similar comparison varieties.
Harvest before frost, leaving part of the stem attached to the fruit. The flesh of this heirloom acorn is a sweet golden yellow that turns more orange in storage and the rind is dark green and ribbed.
Yield; 1 or sometimes 2 fruits/plant. A great market squash or home garden. A beautiful squash that is know for it's taste! Blue Hubbard is know for its big taste and size! The fruit is slightly tapered at both ends and has a bumpy, blue outside.
This winter squash is tasty when fresh, canned or frozen. Golden Hubbard produces sweet fruits packed with dry, fine-grained flesh. Probably the best eating quality squash of all the Hubbards.
Early Butternut's compact, semi-bush plant produces excellent yields. Squash are highly uniform and well suited for fresh market. The earliest butternut on the market! This award-winning variety is substantially earlier than other butternut varieties.
Little Dipper is a “mini” traditional-shaped butternut squash that can even be called personal-sized! It weighs in at about 2 pounds per fruit. Its plant habit is full vine with vigorous growth and has potential to produce a high amount of very uniform...
An unusually shaped round zucchini variety. The Round Zucchini is great in salads, baked, stir-fried or in zucchini bread and works especially well for stuffed zucchini recipes because of its shape.
This squash produces noodle like flesh inside itself. A healthy, tasty replacement for spaghetti noodles. True to its name, grow your own spaghetti noodles! The Vegetable Spaghetti squash is great to use for spaghetti and other meals.
Offers high yields and great for markets. Yellow Bush offers beautiful, bright yellow fruits with a rich, mellow flavor. Beautiful yellow scallops. Also known as Golden Custard.
Get a mix of taste, maturity times and colors in your garden. A great scallop mix for home gardeners. A wonderful mixture of yellow, white, and green scallops.
When ripe, it turns increasingly deep orange and becomes even sweeter and richer. Butternut Squash has a sweet, almost nutty taste that is similar to sweet potato. Waltham Butternut Squash has yellow skin and orange flesh.
Firm, fine flavor with very vigorous spreading vines. Give tatume plenty of room to spread and yields will be very high. Squash are best at 5-7″ in diameter. A summer squash popular in Southern states and Mexico.
Plant after frost danger when soil warms to 65°F. Bush varieties: sow 3-4 feet apart. The 3-4 pound fruit have excellent shelf life and dense, flavorful flesh. For best results move winter squash to a warm dry area 80-90°F to cure; see each type (below)...
Plant after frost danger when soil warms to 65°F. Bush varieties: sow 3-4 feet apart. Vigorous, compact plants keep blooms open longer than typical zucchinis for more successful pollination and fruit set in both hot and cool temperatures.
Compare to Prizewinner F1. The fruit matures in 120 days from planting on vigorous vines. The size of this pumpkin will range from 50 lb to a whopping 150 lb with color superior to the Atlantic types, this will be a great addition for those who want the...
Start early indoors in pots and transplant after last spring frost. Narragansett F1 also features outstanding yields and a full size vigorous vine. Great for fresh, peeling or processing markets.
(Seed Variable); 2-8 lbs./acre.; 7-10 days, 72°F. Can also be seeded directly in the field after soil temperature is 72°F. (8 lbs.) Queensland Blue is a striking blue, flattened, and ribbed winter squash.
Plant after frost danger when soil warms to 65°F. Bush varieties: sow 3-4 feet apart. If you don't have enough room to plant a winter squash, think again. For best results move winter squash to a warm dry area 80-90°F to cure; see each type (below)...