![]() |
'Old Time Tennessee' melon |
The flesh is orange (also good for football time in Tennessee) and the rind is a soft brown color. Don't pick 'OTT' when green, it tastes like a cucumber (I accidentally did that, my eagerness got the best of me). The rind is thin and easy to cut through which can be dangerous if you are competing with critters (like rabbits) for your garden produce. Frequent monitoring of the garden will result in a bounty of fruit. While I have one 'Old Time Tennessee' melon in my custody there are at least four others soon to be ripe on the vine.
As far as pests go, I did have trouble this year with the squash vine borer on my squash plants but they have completely avoided my 'Old Time Tennessee' melons. You can't count that as an official study in vine borer resistance for these melons but you can at least take comfort that if there are other things available for the borers to get maybe they will attack them first and spare the melons! I also planted zinnias and nasturtium as companion plants which may have had a significant impact. (Don't forget to consider companion planting when planning your vegetable garden.)
I'm saving seed for these melons too so those who wanted 'Tigger' melons will find themselves with bonus melon seeds in the mail!