Yes, like all types of squash, pumpkins do flower. Each plant has male and female flowers. The male flowers grow on long, thin stalks, while the stalk end of the female flower eventually becomes the fruit. For a while, each pumpkin will still have a flower attached to its base. As the fruit matures, the flower will dry up and fall off.
Pumpkins have both male and female flowers. It is a flowering plant.
it is a non-watering plant.
It is grown on a vine which is a plant. Is that living?
It grows off of a stem protruding from the main vine, which grows along the ground.
no
Pumpkin comes from a pumpkin vine and grows on the ground
No...a pumpkin grows on a vine--on the ground.
The bugs will invade and the pumpkin, and maybe the vine, will be eaten/rot away.
It is a vine that produces white flowers. See the Web Link to the left.
Horse
A pumpkin is a vine that bears fruit.
In addition to the fruit, other parts of the plant are edible. Squash seeds can be eaten directly, ground into paste, meal, "nut" butter, or even flour. The shoots, leaves, and tendrils can be eaten as greens. The blossoms are an important part of native American cooking, and are also used in many other parts of the world. Both the male and female blossoms can be harvested pre- or mid-flower.
I think you might mean Piper Nigrum. It is the black pepper traditionally used as a seasoning. It is a vine that is a true tropical (American zone 10), and has flowers and red fruit. The fruit is dried and used as a spice.
vine!