Swiech Homestead Happenings

Swiech Homestead Happenings The page title says it all: Swiech Homestead Happenings.

Sharing some Zucchini plant  info: Recently, I was asked how to tell the difference between a male zucchini flower and a...
05/30/2026

Sharing some Zucchini plant info:
Recently, I was asked how to tell the difference between a male zucchini flower and a female flower. These pics should help.
Most years male flowers are plenty. They grow first too. I’ve heard some gardeners complain that they have no zucchini growing, just male flowers. Well, patience is usually the key! I too can’t wait to celebrate my first female flower because that means, it will produce a zucchini. While immaturity is often the case, temperature stress, fertilizer problems, poor sunlight, no pollination, pests, diseases, poor air flow etc. also create issues.

The Zucchini plant takes about 4-6 weeks from seeds to maturity. Before this time, no female flower occurs on the plant. The plant won’t produce female flowers if the surrounding temperature is constantly changing. Too hot or too cold temperature not only hinders flower production but also halts the overall vegetative growth.

Your Zucchini plant could be lacking female flowers if you are feeding it too much. If the fertilizer is high in nitrogen, it will promote vegetative growth, hindering flower production. Zucchini needs balanced fertilizer with NPK value 5-6-8 or 3-4-4 that induces female flowers for fruit development. Personally, I mix some vegetable fertilizer in with my composted soil at the time I transplant my plants. I start seeds indoors but they can be sowed directly too. It’s just my preference.

Zucchini also needs 6-8 hours of direct sunlight to trigger proper flower and fruit development. The leaves may wilt if it is hot but recover easily as temps drop. If you don’t live in a rainy location, you will need to water.

Prune the bushy plant so that the light reaches well towards every part of the plant. If the sunlight isn’t enough, the plant will struggle with vegetative growth and avoid producing flowers until the stress is gone. Pruning is helpful with pollination too.

Female flowers have their fruit behind the flower from the start. However, if the flower isn’t pollinated, the flower will drop off and the baby zucchini will get soft and rot. I know that my zucchini is loved by bumble bees, ants, and honey bees, etc., but I don’t monitor my garden 24/7. Until recently, I couldn’t tell if the flowers were pollinated. I use to go out every morning and hand pollinate all the open female flowers, but I could never remember if I visited it the day before or not. Of course, I could wait to see if the zucchini continues to grow but I have learned two helpful hints. First, stigmas inside the female flower, start off tightly touching and bright yellow. In pollinated flowers, the stigmas start to separate, open more and they turn more orange. When that happens, the zucchini keeps growing and the flower will eventually fall off. The stigma of unpollinated flowers stay close together until the flower dies.

When should you pick zucchini? That’s up to you and what you plan to do with them. The longer you keep the zucchini attached to the plant, the larger it will grow. Younger, smaller zucchini are sweeter to taste and great for salads and chopped veggie dishes. If I let some grow large, I will either slice and layer for zucchini lasagna, grate for zucchini bread, or chop and flash freeze for soups. They definitely taste different if left to grow larger. The same is true of cucumbers.

Zucchini harvested in 2 days. I sautéed one large one with olive oil and homegrown garlic last night. Yum!
05/30/2026

Zucchini harvested in 2 days. I sautéed one large one with olive oil and homegrown garlic last night. Yum!

Since it was overcast I went back out to the orchard and picked some ripe blackberries. There’s a lot this year but most...
05/29/2026

Since it was overcast I went back out to the orchard and picked some ripe blackberries. There’s a lot this year but most are still red. We only have 2 thornless vines but we do have several wild blackberry bushes. They aren’t ripe yet. However, I don’t pick them, because their branches have thorns and are along our rocky driveway and in the back near the woods. My hubby usually picks some, if the deer don’t get to them first.

05/29/2026
05/29/2026

Our Anatolian Pyrenees, Casey, scared him away.
You ain’t nothin’ but a groundhog, eatin’ all the time!🎶

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