Companion Planting With Pumpkins

Published by Maggie on

Pumpkins

Plants that grow well with pumpkins are great pumpkin friend plants. Planting a pumpkin with partner plants isn’t intended to battle vegetable dejection, but instead to enable it to develop better either because friends address the pumpkin plant’s needs somehow, or because they keep pumpkin bugs away. If you are planting pumpkins in your garden, you can learn something about companion planting with pumpkins.

Pumpkin growing companions

The first time you hear about pumpkin companion plants, you may feel confounded about what that means and how it can help in the garden. Partner planting with pumpkins or different vegetables includes gathering together garden plants that help each other to develop. Plants might be classified great buddies in the garden if they draw in advantageous insects like pollinators into the area. Certain herbs and flowers draw in useful insects, for example: thyme, sage, mint, cosmos, lavender…. 

Different plants contain substances in their roots or foliage that repulse pests. The strong smell of some plants, such as garlic and onion, can camouflage the scent of plants like roses, keeping insect pests away.

Companion planting with pumpkins

A variety of plants work well as pumpkin growing companions either because they help the pumpkin plant stay healthy and productive, or because the pumpkin plants aid them in some way, or both. One typical example of companion planting with pumpkins is interspersing corn, beans and pumpkins in the same bed.

The beans can use the cornstalks as support structures to climb up, while the massed foliage of pumpkins keeps down the weeds. Melon and squash are also beneficial as pumpkin companion plants. Some plants that grow well with pumpkins are beneficial because they enhance the vegetable’s flavor.

Marjoram, if used as one of the pumpkin growing companions, is said to produce better tasting pumpkins. Nasturtiums keep bugs and beetles away. Marigold, oregano and dill all repel destructive insects, like the dreaded squash bug.

See also: 14 plants that should never be grown together in the garden

Plants that shouldn’t be grown with pumpkins

Intercropping the wrong species can cause your pumpkins growing problems. For example, experts tell gardeners not to plant pumpkin near potatoes.

Source: www.gardeningknowhow.com

Categories: FYI

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