When to pick sweet success cucumbers?

Pick Sweet Success cucumbers when they are firm, dark green, and around 8-10 inches long, ideally in the morning, using a knife or pruners to cut the stem to encourage more fruit, and harvest frequently to prevent bitterness and over-ripening.
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How do I know when a cucumber is ready to be picked?

Pick cucumbers when they are firm, deep green (unless a different color variety), and have reached the size for their type (e.g., 6-8 inches for slicing, 2-6 inches for pickling), checking daily and harvesting before they turn yellow or develop large seeds for best flavor and to encourage more production. Use pruners to snip them off, leaving a bit of stem.
 
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How big do sweet success cucumbers get?

Sweet Success Cucumber will grow to be about 8 inches tall at maturity, with a spread of 6 feet. When planted in rows, individual plants should be spaced approximately 12 inches apart.
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Can you leave cucumbers on the vine too long?

What happens when you leave a cucumber on the vine too long? Leaving mature fruit on the vine signals the plant that no more fruit is needed. Which causes it to stop producing and die off.
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What happens if you pick cucumbers too early?

What happens if you pick a cucumber too early? Underripe or immature cucumbers are still perfectly edible. However, they're significantly smaller than ripe fruit and may not taste quite as delicious.
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Sweet Success or Bitter Failure ? 6/15/23

Will cucumbers grow in September?

Because the first frost date has shifted, it gives you a bit more wiggle room to "gamble" and plant cucumbers in early September. You might have just luck with a harvest or two, or you may find that you don't get a harvest in time before the frost.
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Do you pick cucumbers when they are prickly?

Yep, the spikes are normal and typically when the spikes go away they're ready to pick. Depending if they're pickling cucumbers they may still be bumpy. Pick them before they turn yellow so they're not over ripe and sour on the inside.
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What is the lifespan of a cucumber plant?

Cucumber plants are annuals, meaning their natural life cycle lasts one growing season (about 2-3 months from planting to peak harvest), ending after fruiting or with the first frost, though good care can extend production for a few months, and indoor plants might last longer. They grow fast, producing fruit 50-70 days after planting, and often decline due to disease like bacterial wilt, so successive plantings ensure a continuous supply, notes The Old Farmer's Almanac, The Spruce, and Reddit users.
 
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What does a ripe cucumber look like?

A ripe cucumber is typically firm, has a deep, uniform green color (unless a specific variety, like lemon cucumbers), a slight gloss, and feels heavy for its size, with minimal yellowing and a fresh, mild scent; avoid soft, mushy, or yellowing ones, as they are overripe and can be bitter.
 
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How do you care for sweet success cucumbers?

Sweet Success Hybrid cucumber seeds need full sun and should be planted in warm soil with a pH level between 6 and 6.8. Sow the seeds an inch deep with 36 inches between plants. If you are using a trellis, a foot between plants is adequate. Cucumbers will need regular watering while growing.
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What should you not plant next to cucumbers?

Avoid planting cucumbers near potatoes, melons, squash, pumpkin, and other gourds (same family, same pests/diseases), strong herbs like sage, rosemary, and mint (stunt growth/compete for water), and brassicas (cabbage, broccoli, kale) as they compete for nutrients and attract pests like cabbage worms. Fennel and tomatoes are also poor choices, potentially inhibiting growth or sharing blight issues, respectively. 
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What is the highest yielding cucumber?

The most productive types of cucumbers are called parthenocarpic cucumbers. These don't require pollination at all! The female flowers on these plants will produce fruit without pollination/fertilization. The fruits don't have any seeds but are still delicious!
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How to tell when a cucumber plant is done producing?

You know a cucumber is done growing when it's firm, deep green (or the color for its variety), and the right size for its type (usually 6-8 inches for slicing, smaller for pickling), often about 8-10 days after flowering, and before it turns yellow or develops large, hard seeds, which signals it's overripe and bitter. Check your seed packet for specific variety details and harvest frequently for the best flavor and more production, cutting the stem with pruners.
 
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Why are my cucumbers spiky?

These tiny spines develop as the cucumber grows and serve as the plant's natural armor.
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How big do pickling cucumbers get before picking?

Start harvesting pickler cucumbers when they are 2 to 3 inches long, and don't let the fruit grow to more than 4 or 5 inches long. Picklers tend to flabbiness in the middle when allowed to get too big. None is particularly long-lived in the fridge.
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Can I still plant cucumbers in August?

Starting vine or bush cucumbers in August will lead to a delicious fall harvest. Vine cucumbers can be the best tasting but need far more space than bush varieties.
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How often should I water cucumbers?

Water cucumbers consistently with about 1-2 inches of water weekly, focusing on deep soaks at the soil level using drip irrigation or soaker hoses to keep leaves dry and prevent fungal diseases; expect to water more frequently (even daily in hot, sandy, or container gardens) during peak summer, checking soil moisture by touch to ensure it stays moist but not waterlogged, as irregular watering causes poor-tasting fruit. 
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Can cucumbers come back every year?

No, common cucumbers (Cucumis sativus) are tender annuals, meaning they complete their life cycle in one growing season and die off in cold weather, requiring replanting each spring; they aren't true perennials that return year after year from their roots, though some tropical cucumis relatives or volunteers might survive mild winters.
 
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What is the 3/2:1 rule for pickling?

An easy pickling recipe to follow is the 3-2-1 method; three parts water, two parts vinegar, and one part sugar. This 3-2-1 pickle brine is on the sweeter side, making it great for bread and butter pickles or spicy pickled beets. For a more savory pickle, use less sugar.
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What do cucumbers look like when they are ready?

A ripe cucumber is typically firm, has a deep, uniform green color (unless a specific variety, like lemon cucumbers), a slight gloss, and feels heavy for its size, with minimal yellowing and a fresh, mild scent; avoid soft, mushy, or yellowing ones, as they are overripe and can be bitter.
 
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Will cucumbers still grow in October?

You can start harvesting cucumbers from around 12 weeks after sowing, in midsummer. The more cucumbers you pick, the more the plant will produce. Outdoor types will crop until September, while greenhouse types can fruit into October if it's warm.
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What is the trick to growing cucumbers?

To grow great cucumbers, give them full sun, rich soil, and consistent, deep watering at the base to prevent bitterness and disease, using drip irrigation or soaker hoses is best. Support vines with a trellis for better airflow and easier picking, fertilize regularly with a balanced feed, and harvest often to encourage more fruit, as they're fast-growing heavy feeders that love warmth (75-85°F) and need protection from frost.
 
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