BASIC GUIDE TO PUMPKIN PRODUCTION
By: Celeste Welty. Bob Precheur, and Mac
Riedel
Departments of Entomology, Horticulture, and
Plant Pathology
The Ohio State University
Columbus, OH 43210
|
Stage |
Pre-plant |
Planting (late May to
mid-June) |
Seedling & stand
establishment (June) |
Vine tip (late June to
mid-July) |
Fruit set (July to
August) |
Fruit maturity (late
August to October) |
Post-harvest |
|
Culture |
· select site:
select a well drained fertile soil that is free of serious perennial weeds
such as quackgrass, johnsongrass or Canadian thistle. See also disease
factors below. · test soil: take samples
in the fall before planting. Apply lime in the fall if necessary. Minimum
desired soil pH is 6.0. · select variety:
Select varieties known to perform well in your area. Many different sizes are
now available and varieties can be matched to your customer needs. Some new
varieties have good levels of powdery mildew tolerance and resistance to
certain virus diseases. · apply fertilizer:
Apply 100% of the recommended phosphorus and potassium fertilizer preplant.
Usual nitrogen rates are 60 to 100 pounds of actual nitrogen per acre. Apply
60 to 80% of the recommended nitrogen fertilizer preplant. (The remaining
nitrogen can be sidedressed before vine tip or applied through the trickle
irrigation system.) · In retail markets
for improved yield and quality, lay drip tape and plastic mulch
for weed control, irrigation and fertigation. |
· plant seed when soil temperatures
reach 58 to 60 degrees F. Use seed treated with fungicide and insecticide. · Lay drip tape
to provide supplemental water to improve germination, plant stand vine
growth, and fruit set later in the season. |
· Irrigation may be required to
germinate seed and insure good plant stand; irrigate to provide 1 inch water
per week · Apply remaining
nitrogen fertilizer in a band along the side of the row before vines
begin to tip. |
· Move bee hives near field when crop
starts to flower; use 1 to 3 hives per acre (and note insecticide cautions in
insect management section below). · Irrigate to
provide 1 inch water per week. |
· Irrigate to
provide 1 inch water per week |
· Harvest can begin when fruit are
fully colored, avoiding cuts and bruises. · Do not leave fruit
in field if wet weather expected or fruit are consistently wet. |
· Cure after harvest at 80-85 degrees F
and 75-80% humidity for about 10-20 days. This can be done in the field if
weather cooperates. · After curing, store at 50-60 degrees and 70%
humidity. · Keep fruit dry and provide good air
circulation. · Temperatures below 40 degrees for long
periods cause chilling injury and lead to fruit rots. · Pumpkins will keep
for 2-3 months if properly handled. |
|
Weed management |
· Apply preplant incorporated (PPI)
herbicides, Command or Prefar: - Command: Be aware of replanting and
application restrictions. Good control of lambsquarter, jimsonweed,
purslane, ragweed and velvetleaf. - Prefar: excellent control of barnyardgrass,
crabgrass, fall panicum and foxtails. Fair to good control of pigweed. |
· Curbit: Apply
before crop and weeds emerge but no later than 2 days after planting. Do not
incorporate and do not use with plastic. Good control of annual grasses,
purslane, lambsquarter and smartweed. Poor to fair control of pigweed,
mustards, ragweed and galinsoga. |
· Apply Poast plus crop oil concentrate to emerged
grass weeds. Safe after crop is established but avoid application during
periods of hot (>90oF), humid weather. · For emerged
weeds between rows: apply Gramoxone Extra in shielded application. Do not
let herbicide come in contact with the crop. |
· Cultivate before vines close, or use
Poast for emerged grasses, or shielded applications of Gramoxone Extra
for emerged broadleaf weeds. |
|
|
· Plow down
weed residue. |
|
Disease management |
· select site based on crop rotation: - crop rotation for control of black rot:
at least 1 year without vine crops. - crop rotation for control of Phytophthora:
2 to 3 years without vine crops, tomato, pepper, or eggplant. · select field with good drainage, for Phytophthora
control · select variety with resistance to powdery
mildew or watermelon mosaic virus, if available. · treat seed with
Clorox to control bacterial diseases (see page xx). |
· Use seed treated
with captan and thiram, to control Pythium, Phytophthora, and Fusarium. |
· If Phytophthora
has been a problem in this field in past 2 years, treat with fungicide
(Ridomil Gold). |
· If field has history of Fusarium belly
rot, anthracnose, or gummy stem blight, then treat with
fungicide (Bravo or Quadris) at vine-tip and every 7-10 days until harvest. · If Phytophthora
symptoms appear, use fungicide (Ridomil Gold or Quadris). |
· Treat with
fungicide (Benlate, Quadris or Nova) for powdery mildew every 7-14
days starting on August 1st or when lesions first seen. This is a
key disease in Ohio. |
· If downy mildew
is detected and fruit not yet orange (usually occurs in August or later), use
fungicide (Quadris or Ridomil) every 7-10 days. |
· Plow down crop
residue to reduce fungal inoculum (anthracnose, alternaria leaf
spot, etc.) |
|
Insect management |
|
· Use seed treated with insecticide to control
seedcorn maggot, especially in fields with much organic matter, and
when weather at planting is wet and cool. · Apply systemic
insecticide (Furadan) to soil at planting for 4 weeks control of cucumber
beetles. |
· If systemic
insecticide not used at planting, then scout twice per week for cucumber
beetles; especially check plants at field edges. Spray insecticide (Sevin,
Asana, Ambush, or Pounce) if >3 beetles per plant. This threshold should prevent beetles from
vectoring bacterial wilt to crop. |
· Scout once per week for eggs of squash
bug on leaves and stems. Use
insecticide (Asana, Ambush, or Pounce) if there is more than one squash bug
egg mass per plant; apply when eggs have hatched and bugs are in small nymph
stage. · If pheromone trap detects large populations
of squash vine borer adults (usually in early July), then spray base
of stems twice, one week apart, when eggs are hatching (usually mid- July),
with Asana, Ambush, or Pounce. · Protect honey
bees from insecticide by choice of timing and product (see pp. 27-28). |
· Scout leaves once per week for spider
mites; if abundant, treat with Kelthane or Agri-Mek or Capture. · Protect honey
bees from insecticide by choice of timing and product (see pp. 27-28). |
· Scout once per week for cucumber beetles
and squash bug; treat only if feeding damage occurring on fruit
surface. · Scout for aphids;
treat (with Thiodan or Metasystox - R) only if honeydew dripping on fruit is
unacceptable. |
· Plow down crop
residue to reduce overwintering sites for cucumber beetle and squash
bug. |