jinman
Rest in Peace
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2001
- Messages
- 20,387
- Location
- Texas - Wise County - Sunset
- Tractor
- NHTC45D, NH LB75B, Ford Jubilee
Jim,
As they say........the proof is in the pudding. How does your melons taste and smell. I did notice you did not comment on taste or smell? Dad and I raised melons for a couple of years and they all lacked that sweet melon taste and/or smell.
hugs, Brandi
Brandi, I don't know why I didn't mention that. The reason I went ahead and cut that melon today is that my wife commented that she could smell how sweet it was way across the room. The Israel melons have a sweet light smell and taste that I can compare only to a light honey flavor. This melon did not disappoint. I let it stay on the vine until it turned yellow and then a couple of days in the house. It has such a light sweet taste that my grandson took one bite and then inhaled the rest of two slices. It's all in limiting the watering to minimum (near harvest time) and letting the melons ripen fully. The Israel melon is a great tasting melon and that's why I grow them. If you want to try some next year, I'll happily send you some of my seeds from this melon that I'm saving. If you plant them around cantaloupes, the next year's crop will be a hybrid because the bees will cross-pollinate, but I've grown these exclusively, so my seeds are not hybrids.