|
Post by Joseph Lofthouse on Apr 30, 2015 10:58:27 GMT -5
Visual Guide To Identifying Squash... Maxima:Leaves smooth and plain. Flowers smallish and rounded. Stem round and cork-like. Mature fruits are commonly shades of green, orange, and peach. Immature fruits may include yellow. Fruit size up to thousands of pounds. Squash over 40 pounds are almost always Maximas. Fruit shape is round, blocky, or elongated. (No necked squash.) Seeds large to extra large. Often corky. Only common squash that sometimes has dark tan seeds. Moschata: Smooth leaves. Often mottled. Huge rounded flowers. Stem 5 sided and flared where it connects to squash. Ripe fruits are tan. Immature fruits are light green, buff, or dark green. Fruit size up to 30 pounds. Fruit shape is blocky, elongated, or necked. Seeds small to medium -- often with a dark margin. Pepo:Deeply lobed leaves. Sometimes with light mottling. Flowers fat star shaped. Stem 5 sided -- star-like -- very angular. Fruits are shades of white, green, yellow, orange, and buff. Fruit size up to about 30 pounds. Fruit shape is round, blocky, elongated, or necked. Fluting is common on fruits. Seeds small. Pepo squash were domesticated twice, so this description is for the zucchini type. Mixta:Jagged leaf margin -- sometimes deeply lobed. Often heavily mottled. Flowers star- shaped with petals rolled up. Stem cork-like -- more irregular and less round than Maxima. Fruits are shades of yellow, white, and green. Fruits roundish or necked. Fruit size up to 15 pounds. Seeds large -- skin often cracked.
|
|
|
Post by castanea on Apr 30, 2015 11:58:23 GMT -5
Nice!
|
|
|
Post by Joseph Lofthouse on Apr 30, 2015 12:05:46 GMT -5
Visual Guide To Identifying Squash... Maxima | Moschata | Pepo | Mixta |
Maxima | Moschata | Pepo | Mixta |
Maxima | Moschata | Pepo | Mixta |
Maxima | Moschata | Pepo | Mixta |
|
|
|
Post by rowan on Apr 30, 2015 15:21:53 GMT -5
Thank you for this Joseph, it is very handy.
|
|
|
Post by steev on Apr 30, 2015 18:12:37 GMT -5
I assume this excellent visual aid is excerpted from your (hopefully) soon-to-be-published book on landrace breeding/gardening.
|
|
|
Post by diane on Apr 30, 2015 22:36:57 GMT -5
I've noticed that most photos posted eventually disappear. Is there some way of keeping these photos in a reference section so they will be safe?
|
|
|
Post by Joseph Lofthouse on Apr 30, 2015 22:44:49 GMT -5
I've noticed that most photos posted eventually disappear. Is there some way of keeping these photos in a reference section so they will be safe? One thing that happens a lot is that people post a link, and then change the filename so the link gets broken. To try and avoid that with the photos that I post, I never change a filename or delete a photo once I have uploaded it to the web.
|
|
|
Post by diane on May 1, 2015 13:20:39 GMT -5
I wasn't thinking of links, but of photos posted here directly.
I just checked on some old messages in which the attached photos don't show any more.
Instead, there is a little blue box with a question mark. I clicked on that, and there was the photo.
Great! They are saved somewhere.
|
|
|
Post by rowan on May 1, 2015 14:44:48 GMT -5
Diane, all photos posted here are links now so you were just lucky with the ones you clicked on. You can't post pics directly now but we used to be able to a few years ago so maybe they were very old pics you looked at?
|
|
|
Post by 12540dumont on May 2, 2015 0:58:49 GMT -5
Joseph...what no pictures with squash but devastation? Last year the only squash I got was Yellow Joe. I'm about to reset the green beds to grow squash. I've had no squash in 2 years. Now that I know what they look like, I wonder if I will ever see one again?
|
|
|
Post by blackox on May 2, 2015 7:08:48 GMT -5
Thanks for posting, useful guide.
You could take it a few steps further and make a sort of field guide for domesticated crops & wild relatives.
|
|