Heirloom Boston Pickling Cucumber (3g)
Produces heavy and continual yields of fruits measuring 3 to 6 inches, perfect for pickling.
The dark green, blunt-ended cucumbers can also be used in salads! The average time to maturity is 57 days.
Heirloom Boston Pickling Cucumber Planting Instructions
- Cucumbers are very sensitive to cold. They need warm soil and air, whether direct seeded or transplanted.
- Don't rush to plant too early. Seeds will not germinate if soil temperature is below 50°F, and germinate only slowly at 68°F.
- Direct seed 1 to 1 1/2 inches deep, either in rows (2 inches apart in rows 5 to 6 feet apart) or in hills (3 to 6 seeds per hill, hills spaced 3 to 5 feet apart).
- Thin to 8 to 15 inches apart in rows or 2 to 3 plants per hill. Snip off plants when thinning to avoid disturbing the roots of nearby plants.
- For early crops, use black plastic mulch and row covers or other protection to speed warming and protect plants.
Direct Seed into Holes in Plastic
Cucumbers seeded into black plastic usually produce larger yields, as well as earlier ones. For extra early crops, start plants inside 3 to 5 weeks before transplanting.
Sow 3 seeds per pot in 2-inch pots. Thin to 1 or 2 plants per pot. Grow above 70°F during the day and above 60°F at night.
Be careful when hardening-off plants not to expose them to cold temperatures. Plants with 1 or 2 true leaves transplant best.
Transplant into black plastic mulch or warm garden soil after danger of frost has passed and weather has settled. Be careful not to damage roots when transplanting.
If using peat pots, make sure they are saturated before transplanting and completely buried. If using row covers, remove when flowers begin to blossom to assure good pollination.
For a continuous harvest, make successive plantings every 2 to 3 weeks until about 3 months before the first fall frost date. About 1 month before first frost, start pinching off new flowers so plants channel energy into ripening existing fruit.
Most cucumbers have both male and female flowers. The male flowers blossom first and produce pollen, but no fruit. Cucumbers are heavy feeders and require fertile soil, nitrogen fertilizer, and/or additions of high-N organic matter sources. Pale, yellowish leaves indicate nitrogen deficiency. Leaf bronzing is a sign of potassium deficiency.
To reduce pest and disease pressure, do not plant cucumbers where you've grown them in the last 2 years.
Heirloom Boston Pickling Cucumber Harvesting Instructions
Generally the time to harvest cucumbers is approximately 60 to 70 days from planting to harvest.
Cucumbers can be picked at any time there is fruit, depending on the cucumber variety and use of the fruit. Cucumbers should be picked early in the morning and refrigerated immediately.
The larger a cucumber gets, the more of its flavor is lost, becoming bitter and unpalatable. Cucumbers that have turned yellow are past their peak.
Once the first cucumbers are ready to be harvested, cut the vine about a 1/2 inch above the fruit. Harvest all of the vegetables before maturity to ensure quality fruits and higher yields.
During harvest time, cucumbers should be picked at least every other day, with daily harvesting being ideal.
Saving Seeds
Slice fruit lengthwise and scrape seeds out with spoon. Allow seeds and jelly-like liquid to sit in jar at room temperature for 3 or 4 days. Fungus will start to form on top. Stir daily.
Jelly will dissolve and good seeds will sink to bottom while remaining debris and immature seeds can be rinsed away. Spread seeds on a paper towel or screen until dry.
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For your privacy and security, packages are delivered discreetly to your doorstep in unmarked boxes.
30-Day Returns
No questions asked on unopened, unused products.
Price Guarantee
If our online product price drops within 30 days of your purchase, we’ll match the lower price, upon request, with an online store credit.
Here Are More Great Reasons to Buy from Us
We're Independent.
Around here, you won’t find any slick bankrollers or financiers behind the curtain. We’re 100% family owned and owe nothing to anyone but you!
This frees us up to do things the right way: craft our own recipes, blend our own foods, fill our own food pouches, and ship our own orders. We operate three large, fully stocked warehouses spanning over 530,000 square feet which ensures the quality packaging of your order.
Others cut corners and outsource their shipping to third parties and that's just not right. It’s also why our quality and savings are better than the rest—and we pass those right along to you with fair pricing.
Free Disaster Replacement Warranty
We are proud to offer the survival industry's very first free disaster replacement warranty. If your My Patriot Supply purchases are destroyed in a natural disaster, our warranty replaces them all, and no cost to you.
Click here to sign up for My Patriot Supply’s Disaster Replacement Warranty.Record-Fast Shipping Speeds
Customers call our shipping "impressive," "flawless," and "man-that-came-fast" excellent.
Double Protection, No Cutting Corners
We take the extra steps that others don’t to protect your food with double-sized oxygen absorbers and ultra-thick, four-layer pouches that we test again and again to ensure quality.
5-Star Customer Service (Literally)
We've served several million American families over the past decade. Our customers have spoken, giving us 4.8 out of 5 stars based on tens of thousands of reviews.
2,000+ Calories/Day in our Food Kits
Our food kits provide 2,000 calories per day with tasty foods.
We’re Serious about Your Privacy
Ordering is 100% secure and we never sell your information. Our packages ship discreetly to your doorstep in a plain brown box with no branding.
Heirloom Boston Pickling Cucumber (3g)
Produces heavy and continual yields of fruits measuring 3 to 6 inches, perfect for pickling.
The dark green, blunt-ended cucumbers can also be used in salads! The average time to maturity is 57 days.
Heirloom Boston Pickling Cucumber Planting Instructions
- Cucumbers are very sensitive to cold. They need warm soil and air, whether direct seeded or transplanted.
- Don't rush to plant too early. Seeds will not germinate if soil temperature is below 50°F, and germinate only slowly at 68°F.
- Direct seed 1 to 1 1/2 inches deep, either in rows (2 inches apart in rows 5 to 6 feet apart) or in hills (3 to 6 seeds per hill, hills spaced 3 to 5 feet apart).
- Thin to 8 to 15 inches apart in rows or 2 to 3 plants per hill. Snip off plants when thinning to avoid disturbing the roots of nearby plants.
- For early crops, use black plastic mulch and row covers or other protection to speed warming and protect plants.
Direct Seed into Holes in Plastic
Cucumbers seeded into black plastic usually produce larger yields, as well as earlier ones. For extra early crops, start plants inside 3 to 5 weeks before transplanting.
Sow 3 seeds per pot in 2-inch pots. Thin to 1 or 2 plants per pot. Grow above 70°F during the day and above 60°F at night.
Be careful when hardening-off plants not to expose them to cold temperatures. Plants with 1 or 2 true leaves transplant best.
Transplant into black plastic mulch or warm garden soil after danger of frost has passed and weather has settled. Be careful not to damage roots when transplanting.
If using peat pots, make sure they are saturated before transplanting and completely buried. If using row covers, remove when flowers begin to blossom to assure good pollination.
For a continuous harvest, make successive plantings every 2 to 3 weeks until about 3 months before the first fall frost date. About 1 month before first frost, start pinching off new flowers so plants channel energy into ripening existing fruit.
Most cucumbers have both male and female flowers. The male flowers blossom first and produce pollen, but no fruit. Cucumbers are heavy feeders and require fertile soil, nitrogen fertilizer, and/or additions of high-N organic matter sources. Pale, yellowish leaves indicate nitrogen deficiency. Leaf bronzing is a sign of potassium deficiency.
To reduce pest and disease pressure, do not plant cucumbers where you've grown them in the last 2 years.
Heirloom Boston Pickling Cucumber Harvesting Instructions
Generally the time to harvest cucumbers is approximately 60 to 70 days from planting to harvest.
Cucumbers can be picked at any time there is fruit, depending on the cucumber variety and use of the fruit. Cucumbers should be picked early in the morning and refrigerated immediately.
The larger a cucumber gets, the more of its flavor is lost, becoming bitter and unpalatable. Cucumbers that have turned yellow are past their peak.
Once the first cucumbers are ready to be harvested, cut the vine about a 1/2 inch above the fruit. Harvest all of the vegetables before maturity to ensure quality fruits and higher yields.
During harvest time, cucumbers should be picked at least every other day, with daily harvesting being ideal.
Saving Seeds
Slice fruit lengthwise and scrape seeds out with spoon. Allow seeds and jelly-like liquid to sit in jar at room temperature for 3 or 4 days. Fungus will start to form on top. Stir daily.
Jelly will dissolve and good seeds will sink to bottom while remaining debris and immature seeds can be rinsed away. Spread seeds on a paper towel or screen until dry.
Discreet, Secure Shipping
For your privacy and security, packages are delivered discreetly to your doorstep in unmarked boxes.
30-Day Returns
No questions asked on unopened, unused products.
Price Guarantee
If our online product price drops within 30 days of your purchase, we’ll match the lower price, upon request, with an online store credit.
Here Are More Great Reasons to Buy from Us
We're Independent.
Around here, you won’t find any slick bankrollers or financiers behind the curtain. We’re 100% family owned and owe nothing to anyone but you!
This frees us up to do things the right way: craft our own recipes, blend our own foods, fill our own food pouches, and ship our own orders. We operate three large, fully stocked warehouses spanning over 530,000 square feet which ensures the quality packaging of your order.
Others cut corners and outsource their shipping to third parties and that's just not right. It’s also why our quality and savings are better than the rest—and we pass those right along to you with fair pricing.
Free Disaster Replacement Warranty
We are proud to offer the survival industry's very first free disaster replacement warranty. If your My Patriot Supply purchases are destroyed in a natural disaster, our warranty replaces them all, and no cost to you.
Click here to sign up for My Patriot Supply’s Disaster Replacement Warranty.Record-Fast Shipping Speeds
Customers call our shipping "impressive," "flawless," and "man-that-came-fast" excellent.
Double Protection, No Cutting Corners
We take the extra steps that others don’t to protect your food with double-sized oxygen absorbers and ultra-thick, four-layer pouches that we test again and again to ensure quality.
5-Star Customer Service (Literally)
We've served several million American families over the past decade. Our customers have spoken, giving us 4.8 out of 5 stars based on tens of thousands of reviews.
2,000+ Calories/Day in our Food Kits
Our food kits provide 2,000 calories per day with tasty foods.
We’re Serious about Your Privacy
Ordering is 100% secure and we never sell your information. Our packages ship discreetly to your doorstep in a plain brown box with no branding.