STILL REAPING A HARVEST IN MID-NOVEMBER

in #gardening7 years ago

Picking our last Kiwanos for the year!


One of the biggest things that I have appreciate moving farther south from Wisconsin all the way down into the Ozarks is that I have a longer growing season. Along with the many other things that we considered when we moved our family was the longer growing season. Many of the plants that we could grow up north we can still grow here, plus many other ones.

Upon moving down here, we soon began to appreciate the hotter climate and the longer growing season, and even began experimenting with plants that we had never even heard of before or ever previously considered. The Kiwano is one such plant.

KIWANOS STILL HIDING IN THE GARDEN

This year we have already had two hard frosts and the vast majority of our garden plants have perished, including our Kiwano vines. However, hidden beneath the dried leaves and vines of the Kiwano plants were still some mature fruit that were protected from the frost. With so many things always going on, it is hard to cross every chore off of your list at the appropriate time, so opportunities like this are a blessing.

We had already enjoyed picking some of these Kiwano melons earlier in the year, and simply never made it out to collect the rest. However, near the end of last week @papa-pepper took his oldest son "Monster Truck the Pepper" out to finish the job.

Unfortunately some had already been partially eaten by animals and others had gotten soft from the frost. At least these can still be used as chicken and pig feed right now, so they weren't completely wasted.

When these melons get completely ripe, they turn a fantastic yellowish-orange color, but the large green ones can still be plucked and allowed to finish maturing. Originally, we had found these for sale at a local organic health food store. The sign in front of them mentioned that they were "locally grown."

That was enough information for me to want to give them a try. Inside of these "jelly melons" are a ton of mature seeds. All we did was save some and try planting them the next year. Sure enough, they sprouted just fine and provided us with a wonderful harvest last year. That was our first year growing them, so we again saved the seeds and grew them again this year.

In fact, this year the majority of Kiwano vines that were growing in our garden were "volunteers." These plants had reseeded themselves from the seeds provided by missed fruit last year, and chose to come back this year to bless us. I love it when things like that happen!

A WORD OF WARNING

The Kiwano is a very interesting and delicious food indeed, but the vine is a real beast. These vines can grow up to 100 feet long and produce as many as 100 Kiwanos per vine. If you ever consider growing them, be sure to give them lots of room.

Moreover, the dried vines are covered in a stiff "hair" that can be rather itchy when brushed up against with your skin. Is this enough of a reason for @papa-pepper to stop growing Kiwanos? No, not even close, I just wanted to warn you.

In total, we found another twenty Kiwanos hiding in the garden. As strange as it was for us to still be harvesting from an outdoor garden in the middle of November, it was even stranger that we were harvesting a peculiar horned melon known as the Kiwano, which is originally from Africa.

As always, I'm @papa-pepper and here's the proof:


proof-of-kiwano



Until next time…

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GIF provided by @malos10


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These are beautiful. I saw these very first time. May be these are rare in our country.. Good to see . Very beautiful. love from Pakistan.. Have good day brother. :)

i did..
try to make quality articles, do comments and stop asking for upvote will improve your blog and ranking. A little advise may be its worthy because i am also newbie. :) have good day.

Thanks. Brother :)

Hmmm... Here you are as a newbie at a 25 reputation giving out good advice to another newbie who already dropped their reputation down to a 12... Let's see if we can reward your kind efforts and raise your rep up.

Thanks.. Your appreciation makes me more motivated. This will be good for me if I get such attention of seniors.

Just make sure to create some good posts with your own content and you'll be on your way. I just wanted to help you out and reward your helpfulness and good example.

I am trying to produce my own content of quality. And i am also learning this platform. Because of not having expertise in English Language somehow i am suffering. But i am trying to improve. Soon i will be on way.. :)

Double vote from me and thanks for being a great addition to the community here on Steemit! The Solid advice you give is great and you will do well here. Keep it up!

Thanks brother for such amazing support. I wish i could do something for you next time :) This platform is really amazing.

Eh, keep being helpful and post your own content and post things that you like. Don't post random things, and keep talking in a way that helps the community and you will for sure do alright, and look at that... already a 38 Rep. Keep it up my friend you will do alright.

Just remember when it doesn't go the way you would like it to then just keep on keepin on and don't let it get you down.

I love harvest time the smell is beautiful!

wow beutifull picture @papa-pepper
if you can visit to my post

nice post... I'm going to follow you
please upvote, comment, and follow me

Wow, this one looks like the hybrid of avacado and pineapple.

Either that or if a cucumber mated with a pufferfish!

Perhaps it's more tasty with vodka haha.

Please follow me and vote my post

That was really interesting I had never heard of this fruit. Great post @papa-pepper. Upvoted.

This does look very delicious, it is something that I do not know either. Glad you enjoy living in the hotter weather.

Follow me and vote my post

Soon you will destroy your reputation if you keep up this behavior. Do you not read the good advice others give you?

Kiwano the horned melon also known as the African cucumber or jelly melon, is an exotic fruit.

Yeah, good stuff! Their is a more round variety too, which I just got seeds for!

I have never seen this kind of fruit before. Do you eat it raw or cooked? It looks like a very interesting fruit, but then @papa-pepper always has interesting things growing in his garden!

@papa-pepper I still have the seed pack you shared with me. I am glad to see the finished produce. I plan to plant some for indoor cultivation soon so I can stretch the season up here in the Northwest. Thank you again for your gifts.

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