Costata Romanesco

Product ID: 2053

Vegetables > Squash

Best-tasting.

Distinctive Italian zucchini, prominently ribbed. Medium gray-green, with pale green flecks and ribs. Big, large-leafed bush with only about half the yield of hybrids, but much better tasting; clearly better textured, nutty, and delicious, raw or cooked. Also a good producer of heavy male blossom buds for cooking. Packet: 30 seeds.

  Days to Maturity or Bloom:   52

Heirloom  

Learn more in the 'Symbols Explained' tab!

In stock

Product Price Quantity
2053Packet  $2.95 
20531 Ounce  $6.00 
20531/4 Pound  $12.30 
20531/2 Pound  $20.30 
20531 Pound  $33.25 
20535 Pounds  $147.00 

Costata Romanesco - Zucchini


Costata Romanesco - Zucchini



No product notes found.

No additional information found.

No disease information found.

Summer

CULTURE: Fertile, composted, well-drained soil is best. DIRECT SEEDING: Sow beginning in late spring after danger of frost, when soil temp. is minimum 62°F (17°C) for treated seeds and 70°F (21°C) for untreated seeds. Seeds will rot in cool soil, especially cool, wet soil! Sow 2-3 seeds every 9-12" (thin to 1 plant), 1/2-1" deep; or sow about 4" apart (thin to 1 plant/ft.), rows 5-6' apart. ROW COVERS: AG-19 (heavier grade) floating row covers will provide about 4° of frost protection, and add warmth for vigor and earlier harvest. DISEASES: If the first few fruits wither, blacken, and/or fail to enlarge, it indicates absence of pollination, remedied when male blossoms appear and provide pollen. Virus diseases tend to be cyclic; watch for resistant varieties. Downy mildew may occur in cool, damp weather, powdery mildew in hot, droughty periods and in the fall. Till in the vines before winter or remove and compost mildewed plants. Copper fungicides offer some control. INSECT PESTS: Protect young plants with floating row covers (see Index). Cucumber beetles, squash bugs, and vine borers can be a challenge. Rotenone and pyrethrin offer some control. Squash bug eggs laid on underside of leaves may be located and crushed. Keep borders well mowed. For vine borers, use rotenone around the base of young plants. Cut borers out of vines and hill soil over the wound. Clean up refuse in the fall, and spring-plow the ground to bury the pupae. HARVEST: Sow every 2-3 weeks for consistent supply. Cut or twist off young fruit at a size fitting market requirements. Avoid scratching fruits. Harvest regularly, 2-3 times a week depending on age of plants and growing weather. STORAGE: Refrigerate at 32-50°F and high humidity to store 1-2 weeks. DAYS TO MATURITY: From direct seeding; subtract about 14 days if transplanting. AVG. DIRECT SEEDING RATE: (at 3 seeds/ft., rows 6' apart)-Zucchini: 62'/oz., 1,000'/lb., 7 1/4 lbs./acre. Yellow Summer: 93'/oz., 1,500'/lb., 5 lbs./acre. Patty Pan: 100'/oz., 1,600'/lb., 4 1/2 lbs./acre. TRANSPLANTS: Figure rates from seed counts. SEED SPECS: SEEDS/LB.: Zucchini: 2,500-4,200 (avg. 3,000); Yellow Summer: 4,200-6,000 (avg. 4,500); Patty Pan: 4,200-5,700 (avg. 4,800). PACKET: Avg. 30 seeds.

Heirloom

Heirloom

HL = Heirloom. Seeds which have been saved over many years and passed down, in original form, from generation to generation.