Marketmore 86 Slicing Cucumber - Sustainably Grown

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Marketmore 86 Slicing Cucumber - Sustainably Grown

Cucumis sativus
(58 days) Open-pollinated. An old fave, bred in 1986 by Dr. Henry Munger, who is renowned for introducing more than 50 cukes during his years at Cornell. Nearly all the disease resistance and improved color of U.S. slicing cukes are the result of his breeding program. Most of you will be familiar with Marketmore 76, which we’ve sold from our very first year. Marketmore 86 is earlier to set its uniform 8–9" fruits on smaller semi-bush plants that are well suited to small gardens. Fruits stay uniformly dark green, even under weather stress. Many prefer the taste of “86”—also good for pickling. Resistant to CMV, DM, PM, and scab.
ECOThis item is sustainably grown


1340 Marketmore 86 - Sustainably Grown
Item Discounted
From
Quantity
A: 1g for $3.15   
B: 4g for $5.75   
C: 16g for $11.50   
D: 32g for $18.00   
E: 112g for $40.00   
K: 448g for $120.00   

Additional Information

Cucumbers

  • About 30-50 seeds/g; variations noted.
  • Days to maturity are from seeding date. From transplant, subtract 20 days.

Culture: May be started indoors for early production, or direct-seeded when soil has warmed. Minimum germination soil temperature 65°, optimal range 65–95°. Very tender, will not survive frost. Direct seed 3" apart thinning to 1' apart in rows 4–6' apart or 6 per mound in hills 4' apart thinning to 3 best plants. For transplants: once seedlings have 1–2 true leaves, about 3 weeks old, plant 1' apart in rows 4–6' apart. Cucumbers require good fertility and regular rain or irrigation for abundant yields. Without adequate water, fruits will be misshapen and bitter. Pick cukes frequently for best production, or else the plants shut down. Make sure to remove blimps to the compost pile.

Combat striped cucumber beetles by handpicking early AM when the dew makes them sluggish, or use floating row covers, removing when cukes flower. Cucumber beetles are the vector for BW.

Using compost in conjunction with row covers (rather than either alone) increased cucumber yields at the University of Michigan.

Parthenocarpic varieties can set fruit without being pollinated, an advantage in cold cloudy summers. Gynoecious varieties produce almost exclusively female flowers for uniformity and high yields.

Saving Seed: Saving cucumber seed is easy! Take that big yellow cuke that got away and save it for seed. Scoop out the guts of overripe fruit and ferment it in an uncovered container for a few days. A moldy gross cap to the slurry means the seeds are ready to rinse and dry. To ensure true-to-type seed, grow only one open-pollinated variety per season.

Diseases:

  • ALS: Alternaria Leaf Spot
  • ANTH: Anthracnose
  • BW: Bacterial Wilt
  • CMV: Cucumber Mosaic Virus
  • CVYV: Cucumber Vein Yellow Virus
  • DM: Downy Mildew
  • PM: Powdery Mildew
  • PRSV: Papaya Ring Spot Virus
  • R: Rust
  • WMV: Watermelon Mosaic Virus
  • ZYMV: Zucchini Yellows Mosaic Virus

Pest: Striped Cucumber Beetle
Cultural controls: use tolerant or resistant varieties, rotate crops, till under crop debris soon after harvest, use floating row covers until flowers appear, use plastic mulch, perimeter trap cropping (Black Zucchini and Blue Hubbard make particularly good trap crops), use yellow sticky strips, hand-pick early morning when beetles are very sluggish.
Materials: Surround, Pyrethrum (PyGanic).

Germination Testing

For the latest results of our germination tests, please see the germination page.

Our Seeds are Non-GMO

Non GMO

All of our seeds are non-GMO, and free of neonicotinoids and fungicides. Fedco is one of the original companies to sign the Safe Seed Pledge.