Vegetable

Armenian cucumber

Cucumis melo var. flexuosus · Cucurbitaceae

Also called: Snake melon, Snake cucumber, Yard-long cucumber, Metki melon

Armenian cucumber (Cucumis melo var. flexuosus) is a moderate-water vegetable well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun, with a fast growth rate. Expect yellow blooms Yellow flowers ~5-7 weeks after sowing.

Armenian cucumber (Cucumis melo var. flexuosus) growing in Tucson
Photo: Seth Vidal (CC BY-SA 2.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Armenian cucumber at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun (6+ hours); notably more heat-tolerant than true cucumbers and handles Tucson summer sun better, though afternoon shade in extreme heat helps.
Mature size
Vigorous vines 6-9+ ft; fruit commonly 12-24 in (up to 36 in) long, ridged and pale green.
Growth rate
Fast
Bloom
Yellow, Yellow flowers ~5-7 weeks after sowing; harvest ~50-70 days. Best harvested young at 12-18 in (can reach 2-3 ft). Spring crop ripens early-mid summer; fall crop in autumn.
Cold hardiness
Frost sensitive warm-season annual; killed by frost. Heat-tolerant in USDA 9a-9b but not cold-hardy.
Soil
Well-drained, fertile soil with compost; tolerates alkaline desert soils, prefers pH ~6.0-7.0. Raised or amended beds preferred.
Native range
Western/Central Asia and the Middle East (it is botanically a melon, not a true cucumber); not native to the Sonoran Desert
Best used as
Fresh eating / salads (no peeling needed, no bitterness), Pickling, Home vegetable garden, Heat-tolerant cucumber substitute
Wildlife
Flowers attract bees and other pollinators (honey bees, native squash/melon bees) needed for fruit set.
Toxicity
Non-toxic to humans, dogs, and cats; safe edible.

How to grow Armenian cucumber in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Keep soil evenly moist; water deeply 2-3 times weekly, increasing frequency in June-July heat. More drought- and heat-tolerant than Cucumis sativus, so it tolerates Tucson summers with regular irrigation and mulch.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Amend bed with compost at planting; side-dress with nitrogen (ammonium sulfate works well in alkaline soil) when vines run and at fruit set. Avoid excess nitrogen.

Pruning & care

Not pruned; strongly benefits from trellising because the long fruits grow straight when hanging and the sprawling vines are vigorous. Keeps fruit off hot ground.

Notes

Despite the name it is a melon (Cucumis melo), so it does not cross with true cucumbers and is burpless/seedless-textured and never bitter. An excellent Tucson choice because it tolerates heat better than true cucumber. Direct sow after last frost, mid-March through May; a fall sowing in August also works. Trellis the vigorous vines. Susceptible to powdery mildew late season.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension (Pima County) vegetable guidance; Pima County Master Gardeners; Arizona low-desert planting calendars

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