- Help! Slugs and snails in your Makkelijke Moestuin
- Why are my plants turning yellow?
- Pests in your vegetable garden?
- Pests: aphids to caterpillars in the vegetable garden
- Moss in your MM-Mix?
- Mushrooms in your Makkelijke Moestuin
- Recognise and deal with mildew
- Courgettes falling off
- Cabbage whites and holes in your plants
- How to identify and treat tomato blight
- How can you help the bees?
- Help! Slugs and snails in your Makkelijke Moestuin
- Why are my plants turning yellow?
- Pests in your vegetable garden?
- Pests: aphids to caterpillars in the vegetable garden
- Moss in your MM-Mix?
- Mushrooms in your Makkelijke Moestuin
- Recognise and deal with mildew
- Courgettes falling off
- Cabbage whites and holes in your plants
- How to identify and treat tomato blight
- How can you help the bees?
Help: my courgettes are falling off the plant
"Why do the fruits of my courgette, pumpkin, or cucumber fall off before they have a chance to grow?"
Good question.
It happens to me too sometimes. Here, look at this young courgette fruit:
Why does this happen?
There are already lots of fruits on the plant
Often, it happens because the plant is already growing several courgettes or cucumbers. The plant decides it has enough to look after.
Just look at this little cucumber:
Another reason is seed production. Once there is one really large fruit on the plant, the plant puts its energy into filling that fruit with seeds. It has less energy left for the smaller ones.
It is too cold and too wet
Fruits can also fall off when the weather is cold and rainy. Courgettes and cucumbers are true summer vegetables. When conditions are too wet or too cold, the plant waits for better weather and drops some fruits.
It is too dry
If you do not water enough, the fruits do not get enough moisture. They shrivel and fall off.
Not enough plant food
Summer vegetables are hungry plants. If the soil mix no longer contains enough nutrients, the plant struggles. Once the plant starts producing fruit, give it extra MM plant food every 4 to 5 weeks.
So whether it is too wet, too cold, too dry, or short on nutrients, the plant decides whether it can support its fruits. If not, some fall off.
Disappointing, yes, but not a disaster: new ones will come along.
Rotting fruit?
Usually the flowers fall off once they have done their job. But sometimes the dead flower stays attached to your courgette.
Flowers and pollination
Usually bees and bumblebees do this work. Here you can see the male flower on the left and the female flower, with a bee inside, on the right:
What can you do about it?
You just need one male flower and one female flower.
Male flowers usually bloom first. They look like this:
You can see it clearly even when the flower buds are still small and green:
How do you pollinate a courgette yourself?
Pick a male flower and remove the petals. They are delicious in salads, or you can add them to a smoothie.
If you, or the bees, only partly pollinated the flower, this can happen:
A courgette like this is still fine to eat, but harvest it fairly quickly. If you leave it hanging too long, it will start to rot after all.
What about cucumbers?
With the cucumber variety we sell, it does not really matter either way: it hardly forms any seeds.
That is all there is to it.
Good luck!
Problems
- Help! Slugs and snails in your Makkelijke Moestuin
- Why are my plants turning yellow?
- Pests in your vegetable garden?
- Pests: aphids to caterpillars in the vegetable garden
- Moss in your MM-Mix?
- Mushrooms in your Makkelijke Moestuin
- Recognise and deal with mildew
- Courgettes falling off
- Cabbage whites and holes in your plants
- How to identify and treat tomato blight
- How can you help the bees?