Gherking
50d to harvest
Crisp and intensely refreshing, Gherking Beit Alpha Cucumber delivers a cool, clean crunch with a bright, lightly sweet flavor at peak pickling size. Expect slender, dark-green fruits with a subtly bumpy, gherkin-like texture that holds its snap beautifully for preserves. Grow it for abundant, quick harvests—ideal for gardeners who want a reliable, garden-to-jar bounty from a vigorous vine.
Crop Dates
| Milestone | Date |
|---|---|
| Start Indoors | Direct Sow |
| Last Frost | Apr 10th |
| Transplant / Sow Outdoors | Apr 24th |
| Harvest Begins | Jun 13th |
| Harvest Ends | Oct 28th |
Crop Details
| Trait | Value |
|---|---|
| Days to Maturity | 50 |
| Sun Requirements | Full Sun |
| Growth Habit | Vine |
| Support Needed | Trellis |
| Planting Depth | Normal |
| Germination Temp (°F) | 70 |
| Min Soil Temp (°F) | 65 |
| Min Night Temp (°F) | 55 |
| Harden Off (days) | 10 |
Frequently Asked Questions
What pest or disease most often affects Cucumis sativus (gherkin) and how can I control it?
Cucumis sativus commonly gets powdery mildew (white dusting on leaves) and downy mildew (yellow patches under leaves), especially when nights are humid. Start by spacing plants for airflow and watering at the soil line (not the foliage), then remove the most affected leaves early. If it keeps spreading, use an appropriate fungicide labeled for cucumbers/ powdery mildew and repeat according to the label interval; harvest usable fruit first rather than leaving diseased vines to continue infecting new growth.
How often should I water gherkins during the main growing phase?
During flowering and fruit set (roughly weeks 3–7), keep soil consistently evenly moist—about 1 to 2 inches (2.5–5 cm) of water per week total, adjusted for your weather. Water deeply 1–3 times per week so the root zone stays damp, then pause only if the top 1 inch (2–3 cm) of soil dries out. Irregular watering leads to bitter fruit and misshapen gherkins, so avoid letting vines swing between very wet and very dry.