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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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Seed Library Waltham Butternut Squash
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Waltham Butternut Squash

$0.00

From Hudson Valley Seed Company. Purchased in 2023.

Description and growing instructions below from Hudson Valley Seeds.

A beloved heirloom butternut variety.

No garden crop soothes the soul like butternut squash. Its smooth, sweet, and nutty flesh entices as it bakes in the oven. For this hallmark experience of autumn we are indebted to insurance-man-turned-farmer Charles Leggett, who developed the Waltham Butternut variety in Massachusetts during the mid-1940s. Leggett combined the dense, easy-to-peel flesh of old gooseneck types with the flavor and texture of the best eating squashes. The result? Pure comfort food, straight from the garden.

GROWING INSTRUCTIONS.

Direct sow after frost, or start indoors 2-3 weeks earlier. Transplant in hills spaced 6' apart, 3 plants per hill, or in rows 36" apart. Plants can grow 6' or more, so give plenty of space to take over. Keep watered for the first couple weeks, and then—in most years—you can forget about them until October. Be sure to harvest before frost: once nipped, the fruits develop soft spots and quickly spoil in storage. Harvest when squash are buff-colored with no trace of green. Cure somewhere warm and dry for a week, then store in a cool, dry, dark place.

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From Hudson Valley Seed Company. Purchased in 2023.

Description and growing instructions below from Hudson Valley Seeds.

A beloved heirloom butternut variety.

No garden crop soothes the soul like butternut squash. Its smooth, sweet, and nutty flesh entices as it bakes in the oven. For this hallmark experience of autumn we are indebted to insurance-man-turned-farmer Charles Leggett, who developed the Waltham Butternut variety in Massachusetts during the mid-1940s. Leggett combined the dense, easy-to-peel flesh of old gooseneck types with the flavor and texture of the best eating squashes. The result? Pure comfort food, straight from the garden.

GROWING INSTRUCTIONS.

Direct sow after frost, or start indoors 2-3 weeks earlier. Transplant in hills spaced 6' apart, 3 plants per hill, or in rows 36" apart. Plants can grow 6' or more, so give plenty of space to take over. Keep watered for the first couple weeks, and then—in most years—you can forget about them until October. Be sure to harvest before frost: once nipped, the fruits develop soft spots and quickly spoil in storage. Harvest when squash are buff-colored with no trace of green. Cure somewhere warm and dry for a week, then store in a cool, dry, dark place.

From Hudson Valley Seed Company. Purchased in 2023.

Description and growing instructions below from Hudson Valley Seeds.

A beloved heirloom butternut variety.

No garden crop soothes the soul like butternut squash. Its smooth, sweet, and nutty flesh entices as it bakes in the oven. For this hallmark experience of autumn we are indebted to insurance-man-turned-farmer Charles Leggett, who developed the Waltham Butternut variety in Massachusetts during the mid-1940s. Leggett combined the dense, easy-to-peel flesh of old gooseneck types with the flavor and texture of the best eating squashes. The result? Pure comfort food, straight from the garden.

GROWING INSTRUCTIONS.

Direct sow after frost, or start indoors 2-3 weeks earlier. Transplant in hills spaced 6' apart, 3 plants per hill, or in rows 36" apart. Plants can grow 6' or more, so give plenty of space to take over. Keep watered for the first couple weeks, and then—in most years—you can forget about them until October. Be sure to harvest before frost: once nipped, the fruits develop soft spots and quickly spoil in storage. Harvest when squash are buff-colored with no trace of green. Cure somewhere warm and dry for a week, then store in a cool, dry, dark place.

GREEN GUERILLAS

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

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