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Grow your own fresh vegetables Start harvesting with Sow Right Seeds The video showcases the product in use.The video guides you through product setup.The video compares multiple products.The video shows the product being unpacked. Grow a variety of tasty veggies Beit Alpha Cucumber Add to Cart Marketmore Add to Cart National Pickling Add to Cart Black Beauty Zucchini Add to Cart Beefsteak Tomato Add to Cart Armenian Green Cucumber Add to Cart Round Zucchini Add to Cart Customer Reviews 4.2 out of 5 stars 1,079 3.8 out of 5 stars 60 4.4 out of 5 stars 1,119 4.3 out of 5 stars 608 4.2 out of 5 stars 2,106 4.0 out of 5 stars 589 4.3 out of 5 stars 925 Price $4.94$4.94 $4.94$4.94 $4.94$4.94 $4.94$4.94 $4.94$4.94 $4.94$4.94 $4.94$4.94 Weight 1G 1G 1G 3G 100MG 1G 3G Size of Packet 3.5" x 5.5" 3.5" x 5.5" 3.5" x 5.5" 3.5" x 5.5" 3.5" x 5.5" 3.5" x 5.5" 3.5" x 5.5" Non-GMO ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ Heirloom Seed ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ Days to Maturity 55-65 days 55-70 days 50-70 days 40-60 days 60-100 days 50-80 days 45-75 days
Beautiful - Full-color packet of Beit Alpha Cucumber (Cucumis sativus) seeds, a heavy producing self-pollinating persian variety that is burpless and wonderful for eating fresh. Sweet skins do not need to be peeled. Minimum of 1g per packet (about 39 seeds).
Productive - Cucumbers germinate in 7-10 days when soil temp is above 70°F. Plant 1/2” deep and space 36-48” apart in an area with full sun. This variety will grow 1’ tall with a spread of 6’. Cucumbers will mature in 55-65 days, plant in USDA zones 4-12.
Fresh Cucumbers on Demand - Cucumbers are great in salads, mini English sandwiches, drinks or just eaten plain. Pick early for gherkins. This variety also makes a tasty option for pickles. Cucumbers are a must for many Japanese and Asian dishes. Increased yields if allowed to climb a trellis, whether outdoors, in a container, or under a greenhouse.
Easy to Grow - Instructions included on each packet. Plus, we are available to answer all your questions. If these seeds don’t germinate, we will happily make it right for you.
Safe and Sustainable - Our operation is fully solar powered, and Sow Right Seeds has taken the Safe Seed Pledge to sell only fresh Non-GMO heirloom seeds for you and your family.
Every seed planted sprouted and the production was crazy. I direct seeded in raised beds. I had planted a few plants of another variety and probably got 10-12 fruit off both plants across their lifetime, probably mostly due to lack of pollination imo. These Beit Alphas produced like crazy. Planted 6, and after a few weeks of growing, was harvesting 4-10 a day for a good two months off this one batch of planting. Had cucumbers coming out of my ears, even though I had to fight off a pickle worm outbreak in the middle of the season. Oh and the taste was great too!Make sure you have something for it to climb and help train young plants if need be, grow cucumbers UP not OUT. Water the ground at the base of the plant in the AM, do NOT water the plant itself (on the leaves), and thin out leaves regularly to get maximum airflow to reduce chances of mildew. Mildew that does happen can be corrected with food safe mildew spray. Watch for holes in the fruit (pickle worms) and in the vine (vine borer) and correct accordingly for best harvest. Make sure you don't let the cucumbers fully mature (will be large and start yellowing at the blossom end) before picking, or the plant will start to kill itself off because it will sense it has done it's job (creating mature fruit that will seed and further the species).Succession planting is great for cucumbers. To spread out your harvest and not get overwhelmed with stock (like I did), but have a nice constant supply, plant one or two as early as possible, then wait 2-3 weeks and plant again. Repeat until a month or so before your first expected frost date. If you run out of space, and have enough time left in your season; as your older plants start to die off, pull them out, add some compost or other nutrient rich amendment and replant. You can have consistent cucumbers for 6-8 months out of the year or more depending on zone.Saw a few reviews complaining about a lot of male flowers, you should be pinching off male flowers until you get a female, some experts even suggest pinching off female flowers if the plant is still small, to help it focus on root and foliage growth instead of spending energy on a fruit. This variety does not need male flowers for the female flowers to fruit. Every female flower will fruit. Either way, pinching off flowers will focus the plant on new production. If, later, you find your more mature plant still having a lot of male flowers, just pinch them off (try to leave some for the bees though!) to again focus the plant in the way you want it to work.