I want to try to grow something from this if I can! I think it's either a cucumber or squash of some sort. Any thoughts? I cam back from vacation and the week I forgot to pull turned into this!

by MutedYellow

35 Comments

  1. North_Inflation_6645

    Probably some kind of squash / zucchini / pumpkin

  2. Pumpkin, squash, zucchini, something of that nature. It’s hard to say until they get fruit on them! Enjoy your free veggies lol

  3. gottagrablunch

    Some type of vining squash or pumpkin. No fruit ( female flowers visible) so hard to see what type.

    Random – the creeping Jenny in the first pic is invasive.

  4. Porkbossam78

    A squash of some kind. Have to wait til it fruits to have any idea. Don’t eat it if it’s at all bitter, some squash hybrids are bad for you

  5. Grimm_Joker

    Not a squash or zucchini because neither of them vine like that. Definitely either a pumpkin or cantaloupe vine. Possibly watermelon

  6. artichoke8

    Also there’s a tomato starting in the middle of the final photo! You’ve got some good volunteers this year!

  7. Opposite-Benefit-804

    Looks like pumpkin, gourd, or some sort of squash 

    Def not cucumber

  8. Quick_Conversation39

    Some kind of squash/pumpkin, it’s not zucchini like some people are saying

  9. Grouchy_Ad_3705

    Most likely jack o lantern pumpkin. People carve pumpkins and toss out the seeds. Squirrels bury seeds when they find them. Most farmed plants are hybrids and will not be the same as the plant it came from. So it could be butternut squash. Curcubits are crazy.

  10. Present-Frosting9848

    Some kind of winter squash. Wait for a female flower and u can guess what squash it is! This is a good garden surprise.

  11. IWantToBeAProducer

    I bet a squirrel in your neighborhood hid a seed in your yard. I imagine it came from a jack o lantern last fall, or someone else’s compost pile.

  12. Noooo0000oooo0001

    Did you have a pumpkin in a nearby spot this fall/Halloween? We get volunteer pumpkins from one we use for decoration for Halloween. Thanks squirrels!!

  13. LopsidedChannel8661

    My eyes were drawn to that creeping Jenny to the right of the plant.

    But yeah, some kind of squash.

  14. junctiongardenergirl

    Ooh, volunteer squash! My guess is some kind of winter squash.

  15. MobileImpressive3046

    Winter squash! The way it vines out and grows tendrils confirms this. Zucchini/summer squash types do not grow tendrils and grow mostly from a central point. You can eat the male blossoms too, the ones that are just flowers without a little squash at the base of the bloom. But if you do, leave a couple for pollination so you get fruit. Volunteer plants are the best & typically very vigorous and healthy since the seed survived the elements & germinated on it’s own. Update as it grows!

  16. Shenloanne

    See this? This is why I hate cucurbits. I can’t do this **intentionally** and it just shows up randomly in people’s gardens.

  17. gholmom500

    Here’s the story: cucubit seeds do great holding up all winter- even in compost piles. The “harder” winter squashed, like bird house gourds, won’t even germinate without a crack or a ton of heat- so they’re particularly likely to pop out of compost piles

    Good News: free ground cover. Potentially free squash.

    Bad News: you’re never sure what you might get. If it was a seed from hybrids, it might not “Breed True” – it might be a weird subtype.

  18. TaneyCountyHeathen

    That’s crook-neck squash! I know this because I am growing the exact plant and the flowers and leaves match perfectly. Harvest the squash when they are 5” long and have the crook neck.

  19. Affectionate_Cost_88

    I’m betting that some critter pooped out a seed, thus gifting you with this plant. 😊 It looks quite healthy and happy!

  20. 207Menace

    Pumpkin or.spaghetti squash. You compost a.jack o lantern?

  21. Han_Ominous

    How do you have marigolds if you don’t garden? I’ve never heard of them coming back.

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