(77 days) F-1 hybrid. A class of cantaloupe notoriously slow to ripen and difficult to harvest ripe without splitting, the ideal Charentais eluded our trialers for years until Heron found Alvaro. Alvaro takes the mystery out of growing Charentais. He called it the Halona of Charentais melons because his, so early, matured around the same time as Halona in 2013. CR’s, first ripening on Sept. 4, 2014, the day after his French Orange and twelve days after his first Halona, were still way earlier than any other Charentais he had ever tried. Almost as if sculpted, grey-green Alvaro shows remarkable uniformity. All 5 fruits, averaging 2.28 lb, ripened within a 3-day window, none splitting or showing any other damage. Even in water-bursting 2013, Heron had nary a split. Deeply sutured 5x6" fruits without netting fill the room with that incomparable Charentais aroma.
In 2020 on July 28 Altoon Sultan of the Northeast Kingdom of VT delightedly observed: “With the wacky hot weather we’ve been having, a lot of my warm weather garden vegetables have been early…But when I saw the Alvaro melons starting to warm in color a couple of days ago, I was flabbergasted. This morning I picked two…now in my kitchen…and scenting the room deliciously.” Thick orange flesh luscious and succulent with silky but firm texture and rich full-bodied flavor—everything we’ve wanted in a Charentais but not found since French Orange.
Supplier Transparency:
? Multinational corporations not to our knowledge engaged in genetic engineering