How To Self-Pollinate Squash
Natasha Bravo

There's nothing more frustrating for a vegetable gardener than having nice big healthy squash plants but no squash! The main reason for this problem is a lack of sufficient pollination. Gardeners have depended on bees and other pollinators to pollinate blossoms in their gardens for centuries. In recent years, as bee populations in some areas are declining for various reasons, including suburban sprawl, colony collapse disorder, and changing weather patterns, some plants may need human help with pollination.


Pollination can also be affected by long stretches of rainy or cold spring weather, or watering too vigorously when pollen is forming. Water at the base of the plant by the stem and try to avoid pouring water on the forming blossoms, or early in the morning when the blossoms have just opened.


It is possible to hand pollinate summer squash like zucchini, winter squash like butternut or pattypan, pumpkins, melons, gourds and cucumber plants for better yields. Indeed, gourd plants tend t oonly open their flowers at night when few pollinators are present, so hand pollinating is often necessary for a good yield. This method will also produce an earlier harvest by encouraging plants to grow fruit sooner and faster than waiting for pollinators.

Planting bee-friendly plants can help attract more bees to help pollinate your squash, but you may want to intervene. This article offers some instructions and advice for effectively self-pollinating your squash plants.


Identifying Male and Female Squash Flowers
Wait to hand pollinate until you have a decent number of blossoms on your plants; at least three or four on each plant. Your squash plant will have male and female blossoms. Here's how to tell the difference. The male flower has a bare stem below the flower, while the female flower has a tiny immature fruit: a baby squash! If that female flower is not pollinated, that tiny fruit will drop off and no fruiting will occur.


Sometimes the earliest flowers to appear are male flowers; be patient! Within a few weeks this balance will shift. Female flowers with tiny fruits should appear soon enough. Normally bees will transfer pollen from the male flowers of one plant to the female flowers of another plant; this is known as cross-pollination. In self-pollination, the male and female flowers of one plant may be used to pollinate on that same plant.

Different varieties of squash have different ratios of male to female flowers. Also the inside of the flowers are a clue to identifying male and female blossoms. The main difference is that male flowers have anthers (little appendages; hey, this is squash sex we're talking about!), which contain pollen (the substance that pollinates) and the female flowers have pistils, which receive the pollen.



Pollinating the Female Squash Flower


Mid morning is probably the best time to pollinate your squash, as the flowers should naturally open by then, But if they have not opened yet, you can gently peel them open with your fingers separating the petals and exposing the anthers and pistils.

Pollinating your squash blossoms by hand is very easy, although somewhat time-consuming if you have a lot of squash plants. Simply take the male flower and expose the anther with pollen. You'll need to pick the make squash flower to be able to apply pollen from the anther to the female flower's pistil. Lightly brush the anther against the pistil in the female flower, leaving some pollen behind. If desired, you may also use a cotton swab or a small make up brush to transfer pollen from the anther to the pistil. You don't need to pick the male flower in order to do this, but these these won't produce squash anyway. Squash blossoms are edible too. You may choose to put your extra squash blossoms into a salad, or make fritters. You can also leave the male flowers on the plant for a little while for the bees to gather nectar from.

That's all there is to it. Now you can sit back and let your squash grow. Be sure to pick summer squash when they're small, for the tenderest flesh. A zucchini can go from six inches long to a foot long practically overnight, if there is enough sun and rain. Happy growing!