(104 days) F-1 hybrid. In summer 2015, we trialed a slew of those personal-size, supposedly powdery-mildew–resistant, hybrid butternuts. We were shocked to find that all but one variety melted down and yielded poorly. While we pawed around salvaging the few fruits of this and that failure, Little Dipper’s ongoing eruption of green stood in sharp contrast. The small fruits of the other personal butternuts come with restricted habit and often a correspondingly low yield. Dipper’s plethora of uniform pale-tan 2–3 lb fruits are set on fully running weed-suppressing vines. We harvested an impressive 22 fruits from 3 plants. Customer Katie Springman, after reading our description, planted with a self-described shrug and a “whatever,” but now she will be looking for them again. They covered a 25' slope in Berkshire Co, MA, and were very productive, most weighing 3¾ to 5½ lb. “And they’re wonderful.”
Open-pollinated Burpee’s Butterbush still reigns for flavor, but Dipper offers nice smooth semi-dry texture and medium nutty sweetness through long storage. While supplier stats of other varieties in the trial advertised their supposed-PMR status boldly, Little Dipper’s just warned us of the crazy growth. For disease and worry resistance, we’ll take vigor and volume any day.
Supplier Transparency:
? Multinational corporations who are engaged in genetic engineering