Yes, you can plant cantaloupe by cucumbers.
They do NOT cross-pollinate as they are different species. Only species fof the same species or closely related species may cross. Non-species crosses are extremely rare and usually sterile.
Cukes and pickles cross with each other. Cukes do not cross with melons, canteloupe, honeydew, guords, squash or pumpkins.
Canteloupe and honeydew can cross.
Pollination doesn't affect the fruit of a plant because the genetics of fruit production is set in the plant which is grown from the seed of the previous year. Cross-pollination within species would affect the fruit of the seeds in the subsequent year. In other words, rogue pollination of your cukes by your neighbors nasty pickles would not affect you current year crop of cukes, but you wouldn't want to save and plant those seeds expecting the same variety as you will have a hybrid which may or may not even be similar in taste.
Yes you can. How else can we get cantaloupes if you don't grow them from a seed!
No, they do not cross-pollenate and it is a myth that the cucumbers will make the melons bitter.
With a shovel and a fork and a belly full of pork :d
Yes, they will not cross with each other.
yes you can plant a zucchini plant ina pot
I planted squash and cucumber next to my zucchini. :)
An angiosperm is a flowering plant. Flowers produce fruits, and a zucchini is a fruit, so the plant is an angiosperm.
no only the seeds
Borers mainly
asparagus, avocado, grapefruit, peach, broccoli, squash, potato, cantaloupe, zucchini, watermelon, and strawberries are high in glutathione.
yes i can because cantaloupe can either be plant;animal and fungi which where eaten by human being
April - June
Plant zucchini in spring , when the danger of frost is over. You can also make successive sowings into summer if you have a growing season that is long.
The Cucumber plant grows in the ground but the fruit grows on the stems.
Depends what plant it is.
If a groundhog eats the flowers off a vegetable plant zucchini and squash, it will not make vegetables.