Tam Dew - Melon Seeds

SKU: ME112
Open-Pollinated
Sale price:$3.15 Regular price: $3.95
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Tam Dew is a sweet, pale-fleshed honeydew bred at Texas A&M for dependable flavor and smooth texture in hot climates. Fruits ripen to creamy yellow, with fragrant green-white flesh that’s well suited to chilled soups, fruit salads, or straight from the fridge. Honeydews pack potassium and vitamin C, making them more than just a dessert fruit.

Provide heat, consistent moisture, and a reflective mulch to bump ripening. Harvest when skin turns slightly waxy and the blossom end gives a little under thumb pressure. If your summers run hot and you want a reliable, subtly sweet melon, Tam Dew earns the row space.

Every order is packed with care by our small team in Pennsylvania and typically ships within 2–3 business days—often by the next business day. We ship throughout the United States using USPS and UPS.

Unopened items may be returned within 30 days of delivery. If an order arrives damaged, incomplete, or incorrect, please contact us so we can make it right.

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We stand behind every packet we sell. Our seeds are carefully selected, tested for germination, untreated, and guaranteed to be true to variety.

Your seeds are covered for one year from the date of purchase. If they fail to germinate under reasonable growing conditions, arrive damaged, or do not grow true to type, contact us and we’ll make it right with a replacement, store credit, or refund.

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Direct seed 2 to 3 weeks after average last frost and when daytime soil temperatures are near 70°f. Or, start melon seed indoors 3-4 weeks before your anticipated planting date. Set transplants in the garden 2 to 3 weeks after danger of frost has passed. Optimum soil temperature for seed germination is 65-85 degrees. A few weeks before transplanting time, harden off plants by exposing them to an increasing number of hours outdoors each day. Delay transplanting until your soil has thoroughly warmed up in the spring.

Scientific name: cucumis melo
Days to maturity: 95-100
Seed depth: 1/2-1"
Days to sprout: 6-8
Plant spacing: 12-24"
Row spacing: 5-6'
Light requirements: sunny
Plant height: 12-15"
Life cycle: annual
Frost hardy: no

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NON-GMO

Open-pollinated varieties for home gardens & seed saving

UNTREATED SEED

Safe seed, free from chemical treatments

HAND PACKED IN PA

Prepared with care by our family and small team

100% SATISFACTION

Third-party lab tested and backed by our guarantee

Growing Guide

Melons have traveled with gardeners for thousands of years, gathering the warmth of summer into fragrant, sweet fruit hidden beneath broad leaves. In American gardens, the word cantaloupe usually refers to the familiar netted, orange-fleshed type of muskmelon.

Other muskmelons include honeydew, Crenshaw, Casaba, and Armenian cucumber. Though their rind, flesh, and harvest cues differ, they share the same basic growing needs: warm soil, full sun, steady moisture, active pollinators, and enough summer heat to ripen well.

Direct sow after frost danger has passed, the soil has warmed to at least 65°F, and nights remain reliably mild. Melons make little progress in cold soil and are easily checked by chilly weather.

In shorter seasons, start seeds indoors about 3–4 weeks before transplanting. Most varieties need roughly 70–100 days to mature, depending on the type and cultivar.

Sow seeds about 1 inch deep. Space plants roughly 18–24 inches apart in rows at least 4 feet apart, giving the vines room to spread and leaves enough air circulation.

When starting indoors, use individual containers and transplant while plants are still young. Harden them gradually and handle the roots carefully, since melons dislike disturbance. Wait for genuinely warm conditions rather than allowing seedlings to become oversized indoors.

Choose a site with full sun from morning through late afternoon. Shade slows ripening and can reduce sweetness, especially in regions with shorter summers.

Grow melons in loose, well-drained soil enriched with finished compost. Keep moisture steady during vine growth, flowering, and early fruit development, then avoid keeping the soil overly wet as fruit approaches maturity. Mulch after the ground has warmed to conserve moisture, suppress weeds, and keep melons away from damp soil.

Male and female flowers grow on the same vine, and insects carry the pollen needed for fruit set. Nearby herbs and flowers can help support the pollinators that turn blossoms into melons.

Netted cantaloupe types are ready when the background color beneath the netting changes from green to tan or yellow, the fruit becomes fragrant, and the stem separates easily with gentle pressure.

Honeydew and some other smooth-skinned muskmelons do not slip from the vine. Use the mature rind color, slight softening at the blossom end, fragrance, and the variety’s specific harvest traits instead.

Muskmelons provide vitamin C, potassium, and plenty of water. Orange-fleshed varieties are especially rich in beta-carotene, while green, pale, and deeply colored melons contain differing mixtures of carotenoids and other plant pigments.

Serve ripe melon fresh, chilled, or paired with herbs, cucumbers, cheeses, and cured meats. It also works well in fruit salads, cold soups, drinks, salsas, and frozen desserts. Mature seeds from suitable varieties may be cleaned, dried, and roasted.

Cucumber beetles, aphids, and squash bugs may feed on young plants or spread disease. Inspect vines often, remove pests and egg clusters by hand, and use insect netting while plants are young. Remove the covering when flowering begins so pollinators can reach the blossoms.

Crop rotation, generous spacing, healthy soil, and watering near the ground help reduce wilt, root rots, powdery mildew, and fruit decay. Avoid planting melons or related vine crops repeatedly in the same bed, and remove badly diseased vines at the end of the season.  

Muskmelons are annual, insect-pollinated plants. Varieties of Cucumis melo cross readily with one another, including cantaloupe, honeydew, Crenshaw, Casaba, and Armenian cucumber.

Save seed from fully ripe, healthy fruit on open-pollinated plants. Grow only one C. melo variety nearby, provide generous isolation, or hand-pollinate and protect selected flowers to preserve varietal purity.

Scoop the seeds and surrounding pulp into a container with a little water and allow the mixture to ferment briefly until the sound seeds separate more easily from the pulp. Rinse well, discard light or poorly developed seed, and spread the cleaned seeds in a thin layer to dry thoroughly. Store fully dry seed in a labeled, airtight container in a cool, dark place.

  • Choose early varieties where summers are short.
  • Give vines full sun for the best flavor.
  • Keep pollinator-friendly flowers nearby.
  • Support fruit with slings if vines are trellised.
  • Check ripening melons daily during warm weather.