posted 3 years ago
Richard,
Thanks for the info! That's good to know. In my research, there are vastly more muskmelon/cantaloupe varieties from around the word than there are honeydew or other rare varieties combined.
I just went through and organized my seed collection yesterday. I found many more varieties of cucumis melo seed that I forgot I had (mostly cantaloupe types). After researching a bit more, I found that all of those varieties will cross readily. There's enough seed varieties to separate the focus on a honeydew strain and a much larger genetic based cantaloupe strain. Although, I've had melons that were crossed between cantaloupe and honeydew, and found them especially delicious. One strain was mostly cantaloupe and one strain was mostly honeydew, but both were very complimentary flavors. I kind of like the idea of blending lines for the randomness in flavor results, but haven't really decided how I want to move forward yet. I will be checking the viability of the older seed before planting season next year, as I will try to grow out a few varieties for fresher seed.
I do have some seeds I saved from a Santa Clause melon which is white fleshed, and more like a honeydew inside with just a hint of sweetness. It is supposed to be a very good storage melon that will keep until Christmas, hence the name. I'm not sure if it's the harder rind type protecting it from insects, or the lack of high sugars that makes it have a long shelf life. I'm curious though about trying to make crosses onto it to increase sweetness with the long keeping storage qualities.
I've not yet tried casaba or canary (can't find any now), but they are in the same family and will cross. If availability is any indication of quality or consumer preferences, then the lack of those rare melons might mean they are not as strongly desired by the consumer.
I wish you good luck with your landrace ventures!
Dirty hands + a sweaty handkerchief = hope for the future.