Mexican sour gherkins hanging on vines, grown from seed, also called mouse melon

Mexican Sour Gherkin Seeds (Mouse Melon): How to Grow These Mini Cucumber Delights from Seed

The Mexican Sour Gherkin, also known as Mouse Melon or Cucamelon, is a highly productive mini-vine cucumber-like plant that produces adorable grape-sized fruits with a flavor somewhere between cucumber and citrus. These tiny morsels are crunchy, tangy, refreshing, and absolutely addictive for snacking, salads, pickling, and garden grazing.

Gardeners love them not just for taste — but because they thrive where traditional cucumbers struggle, handle heat well, resist pests, and can even be grown in 12" hanging baskets with the vines cascading beautifully over the edges.

Today’s guide will show you how to grow Mexican Sour Gherkins from seed, how to plant them indoors or outdoors, and how to get continuous harvests all summer long.


🌱 Where to Buy Mexican Sour Gherkin Seeds


🧺 Growing Mexican Sour Gherkins in a 12” Hanging Basket 

One of our most successful growing setups — and the easiest for smaller gardens or balconies — is planting Mexican Sour Gherkins in a 12-inch hanging basket.

Here’s why this works beautifully:

  • Vines naturally drape over the sides

  • Better airflow → fewer fungal problems

  • No staking required

  • Fruits hang visibly and are easier to harvest

  • No ground rot

  • Attractive visually

  • Excellent for patio gardeners

Once established, the vines will cascade 3 to even 5 feet downward, creating a curtain of mini-watermelon-looking fruits.


🎥 Our YouTube Video Growing Them in Hanging Baskets

Here is our demonstration of Mexican Sour Gherkins we grew ourselves:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGj9KACiB1g


🍃 How to Grow Mexican Sour Gherkin Seeds

1. Start Indoors Early (Optional but Recommended)

Sow seeds indoors 3–4 weeks before your last frost.

  • Temperature ideal: 70–75°F

  • Use a seed-starting mix

  • Plant seeds 1/4" deep

  • Keep moist, not soaked


2. Transplanting or Direct Sowing

Once danger of frost is gone, you can:

  • transplant into containers

  • plant into hanging baskets

  • grow in garden soil along trellises

Spacing if in ground:

  • 12–18 inches apart


3. Sun Requirements

Mexican Sour Gherkins thrive in:

☀️ full sun
but will tolerate very light partial shade.


4. Heat & Pest Resistance

Unlike many cucumbers, these:

✔ resist powdery mildew
✔ resist cucumber beetles
✔ handle extreme heat
✔ have vigorous vines

This makes them far easier to grow than conventional cucumbers.


5. Harvesting

The fruits are best when:

  • grape sized

  • firm

  • crunchy

They taste like:
👉 cucumber + a squeeze of lime

Kids especially LOVE them — garden snacking is guaranteed.


🥗 How to Use Mouse Melons in the Kitchen

  • snack fresh off the vine

  • slice into salads

  • pickle whole like mini gherkins

  • garnish cocktails

  • lunchbox treat

  • salsa additions

  • charcuterie boards

They’re fun, flavorful, and visually unique.


🌿 Related Reading — Easy Seeds Blog

The Ultimate Guide to Easy Seeds for Beginner and Container Gardeners
https://www.trailingpetunia.com/blogs/news/the-ultimate-guide-to-easy-seeds-for-beginner-and-container-gardeners?_pos=16&_sid=abfb8b379&_ss=r


❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Are Mexican Sour Gherkins the same as cucumbers?

They are related but are technically a different species — Melothria scabra — with a more citrus-like flavor.

Can they be grown indoors?

They need sun — indoors is possible with a grow light.

Do they need a trellis?

Ground planting benefits from a trellis, but hanging baskets eliminate that need.

How long until harvest?

About 60–70 days from sprouting.

Do they reseed or come back?

They are warm-season annuals, but you can save seeds for next year.

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