Start indoors • Trellis
Climbing courgette
Product information
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Additional
Description
Specifications
Height: 180 cm
Contents: 4 seeds, enough for 4 squares
In the app
Sowing: 25 April - 31 May
Level 1
pre-germinating
Level 2
started indoors
Level 3
first seedlings emerging
Level 4
large seedlings
Level 5
small plants
Level 6
hardening off: day 1
Level 7
hardening off: day 2
Level 8
hardening off: day 3
Level 9
hardening off: day 4
Level 10
hardening off: day 5
Level 11
planted in final position
Level 12
small plant by the trellis
Level 13
plant reaches trellis
Level 14
flowers visible
Level 15
first harvest
Level 16
harvesting continues
- Currently only shipping to the Netherlands and Belgium
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- The app helps you with almost everything you do in your vegetable garden: sowing, tending, and harvesting.
- If something goes wrong, the app tells you what steps to take.
- If that doesn’t work, you can ask us for advice.
- If that still doesn’t help, we’ll look for other solutions together. Until we get it right.
About our climbing courgette
- Variety: Black Forest F1
- Family: fruiting vegetables
- Plants per square: 1 by the trellis
- Height: up to 200 cm
- Start indoors: from late April to late May
- Germination: 4 to 10 days at 20 to 25°C
- Time to harvest: from 9 to 10 weeks
- Sunlight: needs a sunny spot
- Packet contents: 4 seeds, enough for 4 squares
- Yield: 10 to 37 courgettes per plant
This climbing courgette is also included in the climbers seed package:
What do you need to grow climbing courgettes?
- MM seed-starting mix or MM coconut seed-starting mix
- large MM Airpots
- clear kitchen film, unless you use coconut mix
- one 30 × 30 cm square
- Makkelijke Moestuinmix or MM coconut mix
- a spot with at least 8 hours of sunlight a day
- an MM trellis, or similar support
- MM plant food
Level 1: pre-germinate the seeds
That is why you start them indoors around late April or early May. Plant the young plant in your raised bed around late May. Because the plants grow quickly, you can also start them in late May. The plant can then move outside sooner.
Before sowing the seeds in a pot, let a small root appear first. This is called pre-germinating, and it lets you know that the seeds are germinating properly.
It is simple: fold a piece of kitchen roll or toilet paper a few times, moisten it (damp, not wet), and place it in a small container.
Check now and then to see whether a root has appeared. Sometimes you will see one after 2 or 3 days, but it often takes longer. Some seeds can take more than 10 days.
Level 2: Sow the pre-germinated seeds in Airpots
- pre-germinated seeds
- large MM Airpots, one per seed
- MM seed-starting mix or MM coconut seed-starting mix
- clear kitchen film, unless you use coconut mix
Fill the Airpots with seed-starting mix and moisten it.
Make a generous hole about 1 cm deep. Carefully place the seed in it without damaging the tiny root. Close the hole and cover the Airpot with kitchen film to keep the mix moist. You do not need film with coconut mix.
Put the pot in a warm place indoors, away from radiators and direct sunlight.
Level 3: courgette seedlings
After another 5 days or so, it is time for the next level.
Level 4 and 5: care for your plants on the windowsill
The seedling soon grows into a real little plant. Turn the pot a quarter turn every day so it does not grow crooked. It is also important to keep the mix moist, but not soaking wet.
Level 6-10: harden them off outdoors
In the final level they stay outside all day, and you only bring them back indoors at night.
Level 11: Plant the strongest courgette in your Makkelijke Moestuin raised bed
To help the plant get going, add 2 tablespoons of extra MM plant food to the planting hole before putting the plant in.
Level 12 and 13: care and trellis
Water every day when the weather is dry. A climbing courgette does not grip the trellis net by itself, so tie it to the net with string, clips, or plant ties.
Level 14: flowering and pollination
If that does not happen, the tiny courgette or pumpkin may fall off before it really starts growing. Unfortunately, there are fewer bees than there used to be. To be sure, you can also pollinate the flowers yourself:
The next levels: harvesting
Cut them off with scissors at the short, thick stem. That gives you the smallest chance of damaging the plant.
Growth and extra plant food
Sometimes the small courgettes fall off before they start growing. They probably have not been pollinated, or the plant is getting too little plant food.
Read more about that here.
In autumn, you will almost always see mildew. By then, it is rarely a real problem.
How can you use courgette?
Small courgettes can be eaten raw in salads, just like the flowers.
You can also use them as a pizza topping, as Atalanta does:
They are a light, versatile vegetable that works well in many meals.
So, what is stopping you from sowing and growing courgettes yourself?
Good luck!