Watermelon
Citrullus lanatus
Also known as: Sandía, Wassermelone, Tang gua
Quick facts
- Category
- fruiting
- Difficulty
- intermediate
- Days to harvest
- 75 to 100 days
- Harvest type
- continuous production over weeks or months
- Spacing
- 180 cm between plants
Environment
- Temperature
- 21–32°C
- pH
- 6 to 6.8
- EC (hydroponic)
- 2 to 2.8 mS/cm
- Daily light
- 25 to 35 mol/m²/day (strict, will fail outside this range)
Climate and zones
- USDA zones
- 4 to 13 (winter low around -34°C or warmer)
- Frost tolerance
- frost sensitive (dies at first frost)
- Season
- warm (summer crops, frost-sensitive)
Viable growing environments:
- outdoor in growing season (annual)
- unheated greenhouse / hoop house
- heated greenhouse
USDA zone bounds reflect outdoor year-round survival. Anywhere outside the bounded zone range, this crop still grows as an annual in the warm months (outdoor_seasonal), under cover (greenhouse), or indoors under lights.
Growing systems
Watermelon works in:
- drip / Dutch buckets
- media bed (ebb and flow)
- soil bed
Root mass is heavy - thin-channel systems (NFT, vertical towers) can't hold this crop mechanically, hence the system list above.
Growing media
The substrate the roots sit in. Choice depends on the system (clay pebbles don't fit NFT channels; rockwool isn't used in media beds) and the crop (watermelon works in the media listed below).
| Medium | pH effect | Water retention | Bacterial surface |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coco coir (Coconut coir) | slightly acidic | high | moderate |
| Perlite (Expanded volcanic glass) | neutral / inert | very low | low |
| Soil-based mix (Potting soil) | varies by source | high | high |
Bacterial surface area matters for aquaponics: clay pebbles, lava rock, and pumice double as biofilter substrate. Low-surface media (rockwool, perlite, pea gravel) work in hydroponics but need a separate biofilter in aquaponics.
Nutrient demand by stage
NPK ratios are relative weights at each growth stage; the nutrient mix calculator scales them to absolute grams or ml. EC targets shift through the plant's life: seedlings need a much lighter solution than fruiting adults.
| Stage | N | P | K | EC target (mS/cm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| seedling | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1.4 |
| vegetative | 3 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| flowering | 1 | 2 | 3 | 2.4 |
| fruiting | 1 | 2 | 3 | 2.6 |
Companion-growing notes
- Heavy uptake of potassium, nitrogen. Co-grown crops with the same demand will end up deficient even at "correct" EC. Plan around this in shared reservoirs.
- Very high transpiration. Reservoir level drops fast once the plant is mature; expect daily top-ups and watch for EC creeping up as water evaporates faster than salts.
Aquaponics suitability
Compatible with typical aquaponics nutrient profiles. Fish waste provides enough nitrogen for healthy growth; supplemental potassium, calcium, and iron may still be needed depending on fish stocking density.
Care notes
A space-demanding vine crop for warm outdoor growing or large greenhouses. Dutch bucket or large container (30 L) with strong trellis for vertical growing of mini/personal varieties. EC 2.0-3.5 mS/cm. pH 5.5-6.5. Temperature: 25–35°C (among the most heat-demanding crops). Very high light (DLI 22-35 mol/m2/day). Hand-pollination required indoors. Mini varieties ('Sugar Baby', 'Crimson Sweet') are more practical for trellised hydroponic growing than full-sized types. Support developing fruits in mesh slings. Each vine produces 2-4 mini melons or 1-2 large melons. From transplant to harvest: 70-90 days for mini types, 80-100 for full-sized. Harvest timing: tap the melon (a deep, hollow sound indicates ripeness); check the ground spot (should be creamy yellow, not white); the tendril nearest the stem should be brown and dry. Reduce watering in the final week to concentrate sugars.
Notable varieties
A starting shortlist of cultivars worth knowing about. Not exhaustive: the seed catalogs list hundreds of named varieties. These are the ones home growers commonly choose between.
| Cultivar | Type | Days | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sugar Baby | open-pollinated | 75 | Icebox-size (3-5 kg), the short-season home garden standard. Will grow in greenhouse vertical systems with slings. Reliable in zones 4-7 where larger types run out of season. |
| Crimson Sweet | open-pollinated | 85 | Classic large round watermelon (10-15 kg), the variety most picnic watermelons descend from. Needs zones 6+ and a full 85+ day warm season. |
| Black Diamond | heirloom | 90 | Very large (15-25 kg), dark-skinned. Old Southern variety; what people picture when they hear 'watermelon.' Long season and heavy; not greenhouse-suitable. |
| Yellow Doll F1 | hybrid | 70 | Yellow flesh, icebox-size, very early. The shortest-season watermelon available; works in zone 4 short summers where Sugar Baby is marginal. |
Verified against: u-florida-ifas, rhs-uk, cornell-cea. Last reviewed 2026-05-15.