davaroo
Garden Ornament
Well, I got my first "Tigger" melon the other day. These originated in the rugged mountains of Armenia and so are compact plants. The yellow fruits are about the size of a softball, with blazing red tiger stripes. They are well suited to dry environments or low water schemes.
While they are gorgeous to look at, they aren't so good, as melons go. The flesh is white and they have the flavor of a kinda sweet cucumber. They are firmer than the average cuke, but lack the juiciness and aromatic qualities of other melons.
In my esteem, melons should be a feast for the eye and the senses. They are the "candy" of the garden and should bowl you over with their appearance, aroma and sensuous taste. These only manage one out of three.
They would be awesome on a trellis and Ive heard they are better if grown that way. Their size and appearance would make them nice for greenhouse growing, too.
I think if I grow them again, it will be on a trellis in a spot of their own. This will give me a bit more control, as this season they were just one of many in the "melon patch". They got the same water and they may have cross-pollinated, for all I know. I would also carefully monitor the water to grow them "dry," as is part of their habitat of origin.
Anyway, they sure are pretty!
While they are gorgeous to look at, they aren't so good, as melons go. The flesh is white and they have the flavor of a kinda sweet cucumber. They are firmer than the average cuke, but lack the juiciness and aromatic qualities of other melons.
In my esteem, melons should be a feast for the eye and the senses. They are the "candy" of the garden and should bowl you over with their appearance, aroma and sensuous taste. These only manage one out of three.
They would be awesome on a trellis and Ive heard they are better if grown that way. Their size and appearance would make them nice for greenhouse growing, too.
I think if I grow them again, it will be on a trellis in a spot of their own. This will give me a bit more control, as this season they were just one of many in the "melon patch". They got the same water and they may have cross-pollinated, for all I know. I would also carefully monitor the water to grow them "dry," as is part of their habitat of origin.
Anyway, they sure are pretty!