Life and Death of Zucchini

RedClayGardener

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At what point do you pull zucchini plants? Mine have recently survived a bout of squash bug and powdery mildew. There is one small zucchini growing but that is it. There are a couple of male blooms but I have not harvested a zucchini in a couple week. I have fall vegetables waiting in the wings to be put out, but I hate to pull the zucchini if it will come back. This is my first year with a garden so I am not quite sure.

Thanks for any help/gardening philosophy you can give!
 

nccountrygirl

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I think it's time to pull them. I pulled mine a few weeks ago, they were starting to look rough. Maybe you could plant a fall veggie in it's place.
 

OaklandCityFarmer

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I agree, it is time to pull it.

They grow best in the summer heat and now that the summer is coming to a close in a lot of parts they should be replaced with something else.

Good luck!
 

RedClayGardener

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Thanks everyone! I will pull them tonight. One more quick question. They have some powdery mildew on them now. Can I still compost them? Will that come back to haunt me later?
 

curly_kate

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Em, from what I know, you should never compost any diseased plants because a lot of stuff will persist. But I'm pretty new at it, so someone else probably has better insight. :)
 

bills

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If you hot compost them you shouldn't have a problem with simple mildew. If it was a wilt problem like tomato wilt, or potato wilt, I would burn, or garbage them, and never ever compost them.
 

LindaN

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I compost stuff with powdery mildew all the time.

Powdery mildew is one of those things that you just can't seem to avoid with many plants. I have an old-fashioned lilac shrub, for example, that gets powdery mildew every year. It's unattractive, but won't kill the plant.

Now if you had a much more deadly fungus or disease, I'd say not to compost. But powdery mildew is really not that bad.

Never compost bindweed either!!! Ask me how I know...;)
 
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