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Growing zucchini / courgette vertically!

 
Posts: 3
Location: Amsterdam, Netherlands
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Hello all!

I've been on a seemingly endless search and still come up with nothing concrete about how to grow a zucchini plant - bush variety (Black Beauty to be precise) vertically.

Came across many people who said it couldn't be done, then many others who said it could and had actually been doing it - successfully - for years. I got to see a few photos but nobody has posted a clear step by step guide showing HOW it's actually trained upwards like it is.

Most people had planted their zucchini next to a heavy duty stake and proceeded to tie it up as it grew. I've now made a similar setup - I've got a thick bamboo cane right at the stem and made a circular 'cage' type trellis surrounding my rapidly growing zucchini. However, the question is, what to actually do next? How is the zucchini tied onto the stake when there are so many tender new leaves coming out of the stem - am I meant to cut them off? There doesn't seem much space to tie it onto the support.

Thanks so much for any advice or tips in advance!
 
Posts: 166
Location: Kentucky 6b
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I could be totally wrong, but I'm not sure you could grow a bush style vertically, vining sure. Then again, I can think of an advantage to it. Bush styles should take up less ground space, seeing that's the point of a bush style anyway, and I can't personally see how attempting to grow them vertical would save enough space to be worthwhile.
 
Posts: 46
Location: under a foil hat
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forest garden
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I second that. The indeterminate varieties are what you want if you're looking to go vertical. The bush varieties lack the tendrils needed to climb/cling to a trellis. But if you've already started the black beauty zucs are fantastic plants in a compact space in my experience. Just not over about 3ft. high.
 
Posts: 37
Location: Maritime Northwest USA, zone 8b
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There's not anything on a Black Beauty plant to train. The leaf stalks come straight out of the center of the plant, and the zucchini also grow right in the center of the plant.
 
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