Thursday, 9/26/24. Baby pumpkin!! My husband is amazing!

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Thursday, 9/26/24. Baby pumpkin!! My husband is amazing!

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Controlled pollination on today's Pyrolga bloom. (Pro tip, old spent flower stems make perfectly fine flower ties.)
If this vine is growing yellow pumpkins I'll definitely want to save seeds, so I did a self cross to make sure the line is pure. Even if it ends up white instead, I'll still have an updated batch of seeds from a vine with my preferred growth habit.
October and still full of flowers! Iâve been hand-pollinating them for the past few weeks, so hopefully Iâll get some seeds!! đ¤đ˝
The citrus plants were blooming like crazy in the propagation house, so I experimented with hand-pollination. It worked way better than I thought it would! So good, in fact, that I ended up cutting off a vast majority of the immature fruits, so the young plants wouldnât put all their energy into them. I left a couple on one plant though. ;)
if bees pollinate a heirloom pumpkin, can the seeds still be saved for next year? or are you supposed to hand pollinate those types yourselves?
That depends whether you're growing any other pumpkins or squash of that same species (or a close neighbor might be). If so, there is a risk of cross breeding, and it would be best to hand-pollinate* any flowers from which you intend to save seeds that will still be heirloom for next year. If not, it's okay to just let what happens happens and then save whatever seeds you want.
*To be pedantic again for the benefit of other readers, the operative thing here isn't whether the gardener pollinates, it's whether only the gardener pollinates. Just strolling up to an already-open female flower and pollinating it yourself does nothing to assure heirloom purity, because 900 bees have already visited it covered in who knows what pollen. When you're hand-pollinating with seed saving as a motive, you must seal off the female flower the night before it blooms, then remove the cover just long enough to pollinate it, and replace it again to be sure no bees contact it. To be 100% sure, you should pre-seal the male also.

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How to hand-pollinate
Pollination is simply getting pollen from the male flower into the female flower. If successful, a baby pumpkin starts to grow - this is called âfruit setâ. Itâs easy, hereâs how.
First of all, for pollination to occur - whether done by bees or by you - at least one male and at least one female have to bloom on the same morning.
Getting some more training in my bee apprenticeship