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Green Guerillas
About
History
Values
Team
Program Summary
Youth
Youth Empowerment Pipeline
Summer Youth Tillers
Youth Toolkit
Youth Reflections
Community Gardeners
Council of Gardeners
Community Gardens Support
Seed Library
Tool Library
Tool Safety
Resources
Upcoming Events
Contact Us
Donate
Donate Now
Planned Giving
Give to Seed & Tool Library
Take Action
Folder: About
Back
History
Values
Team
Program Summary
Folder: Youth
Back
Youth Empowerment Pipeline
Summer Youth Tillers
Youth Toolkit
Youth Reflections
Folder: Community Gardeners
Back
Council of Gardeners
Community Gardens Support
Seed Library
Tool Library
Tool Safety
Resources
Upcoming Events
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Folder: Donate
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Seed Library Honeynut Squash
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Honeynut Squash

$0.00
sold out

From Hudson Valley Seed Company. Purchased in 2023.

Description and growing instructions below from Hudson Valley Seeds.

Delicious and convenient single-meal-sized keepers.

Squashes were once too large, too bitter, and too seedy for humans to stomach. But mastodons had different tastes, giant molars, and bigger guts. Their stature also had a huge impact on the soil, creating disturbances that were ideal squash habitat. After the megafauna faded, it was humans who created a niche in their gardens in which squash could survive.

This delightful mini butternut was bred at Cornell University. It's a butternut for the smaller garden and the modest appetite. These little plants produce miniature butternut squashes, much more squat than the standard, but with excellent flavor and texture. A treat for those who thought they couldn't fit a winter squash into their gardens.

GROWING INSTRUCTIONS.

Direct sow after frost, or start indoors 2-3 weeks earlier. Transplant in hills 6' apart, three plants per hill, or in rows 36" apart. Can be trained to grow up a trellis. Harvest when squash are buff-colored with no trace of green. Cure in a warm spot for 2-3 weeks.

Add To Cart

From Hudson Valley Seed Company. Purchased in 2023.

Description and growing instructions below from Hudson Valley Seeds.

Delicious and convenient single-meal-sized keepers.

Squashes were once too large, too bitter, and too seedy for humans to stomach. But mastodons had different tastes, giant molars, and bigger guts. Their stature also had a huge impact on the soil, creating disturbances that were ideal squash habitat. After the megafauna faded, it was humans who created a niche in their gardens in which squash could survive.

This delightful mini butternut was bred at Cornell University. It's a butternut for the smaller garden and the modest appetite. These little plants produce miniature butternut squashes, much more squat than the standard, but with excellent flavor and texture. A treat for those who thought they couldn't fit a winter squash into their gardens.

GROWING INSTRUCTIONS.

Direct sow after frost, or start indoors 2-3 weeks earlier. Transplant in hills 6' apart, three plants per hill, or in rows 36" apart. Can be trained to grow up a trellis. Harvest when squash are buff-colored with no trace of green. Cure in a warm spot for 2-3 weeks.

From Hudson Valley Seed Company. Purchased in 2023.

Description and growing instructions below from Hudson Valley Seeds.

Delicious and convenient single-meal-sized keepers.

Squashes were once too large, too bitter, and too seedy for humans to stomach. But mastodons had different tastes, giant molars, and bigger guts. Their stature also had a huge impact on the soil, creating disturbances that were ideal squash habitat. After the megafauna faded, it was humans who created a niche in their gardens in which squash could survive.

This delightful mini butternut was bred at Cornell University. It's a butternut for the smaller garden and the modest appetite. These little plants produce miniature butternut squashes, much more squat than the standard, but with excellent flavor and texture. A treat for those who thought they couldn't fit a winter squash into their gardens.

GROWING INSTRUCTIONS.

Direct sow after frost, or start indoors 2-3 weeks earlier. Transplant in hills 6' apart, three plants per hill, or in rows 36" apart. Can be trained to grow up a trellis. Harvest when squash are buff-colored with no trace of green. Cure in a warm spot for 2-3 weeks.

GREEN GUERILLAS

925 Bergen St, #206
Brooklyn, NY 11238
(212) 594-2155

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