(98 days) Open pollinated.
Garden writer Barbara Damrosch says “it looks as if peanut-shaped worms were crawling about its surface.” Depending on your point of view, it is either among the ugliest or most beautiful of all squashes. We vote for the latter. This heirloom, hailing from the Bordeaux region of France, was listed by Vilmorin in 1883 as Warted Sugar Marrow. It resurfaced at the Pumpkin Fair in Tranzault, France, in 1996. Shaped like rounded slightly flattened pumpkins, the 15-lb fruits have salmon-peach skins covered with large warts. Although Galeux is worth growing for beauty alone, its tender moist sweet orange flesh is delightful in soups or baked. Ripens easily from direct seeding even in sub- prime squash years. For your autumn pleasure; not a good keeper.
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