Vegetable
Winter squash (butternut)
Cucurbita moschata · Cucurbitaceae
Also called: Butternut squash, Winter squash
Winter squash (butternut) (Cucurbita moschata) is a moderate-water vegetable well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun, with a moderate growth rate.

Winter squash (butternut) at a glance
- Water use
- Moderate (established)
- Sun
- Full sun (6-8 hours) for ripening of the long-season fruit; tolerates Tucson heat well with consistent moisture.
- Mature size
- Sprawling vines 6-12+ ft long.
- Growth rate
- Moderate
- Bloom
- Yellow-orange flowers; tan/buff mature fruit, Long-season warm crop: sow seed in spring (March-April) or after the monsoon onset (July) for a fall harvest; needs ~90-110+ days to mature. C. moschata tolerates heat and resists squash vine borer better than C. pepo.
- Cold hardiness
- Frost-tender annual; vines killed by frost. Harvest mature fruit before the first fall frost; fruit then cures and stores for months.
- Soil
- Rich, deep, well-drained, compost-amended soil; mounded hills or raised beds in Tucson's alkaline soils.
- Native range
- Cucurbita moschata is native to the Americas (Mexico/Central America). New-World species but not specifically native to the Sonoran Desert.
- Best used as
- Edible storage fruit (culinary vegetable), Long-storage winter crop, Raised-bed and field vegetable gardening
- Wildlife
- Flowers strongly attract bees (squash bees, honeybees), which are required for pollination and fruit set.
- Toxicity
- Non-toxic and edible. Rarely, stress-induced bitter fruit can contain cucurbitacins causing GI upset.
How to grow Winter squash (butternut) in Tucson & the low desert
Watering
Deep, regular drip watering throughout the long growing season; reduce watering as fruit matures and rinds harden to improve storage quality and flavor. Water at the base to limit mildew; mulch the wide vines.
Fertilizer & nutrients
Heavy feeder: amend with compost and a balanced fertilizer at planting; side-dress with nitrogen during vining growth, then emphasize phosphorus/potassium during flowering and fruit development.
Pruning & care
Generally not pruned; allow vines to sprawl or trellis with fruit support. Tip-pinch vines late in the season to direct energy into ripening existing fruit.
Notes
Grown as a long-season warm annual in Tucson; a good monsoon-season (July) planting choice because C. moschata's solid stems resist squash vine borer and it handles desert heat. Provide ample space, deep watering early, and let fruit fully cure on the vine for long winter storage. Harvest before fall frost.
Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension - Pima County Monthly Gardening Guides (March, April; monsoon planting); Pima County Master Gardeners; Tucson Organic Gardeners Planting Guide