Best Cucumber Varieties for Pennsylvania (Slicers, Picklers & More)
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Quick Reference
Cucumber Season in Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania’s cucumber window runs roughly from transplant time in mid-May (Zone 6a) to first frost in early October. That’s a generous window in the south and a tight sprint in the mountain counties. The critical factor most growers overlook isn’t length — it’s the disease pressure that arrives in July. Powdery mildew, angular leaf spot, and downy mildew accelerate through PA’s humid summers and shut down susceptible plants well before the calendar says it’s over.
This makes disease resistance the single most important selection criterion for Pennsylvania cucumbers. Two varieties with identical harvest windows will perform completely differently in PA if one has downy mildew resistance and the other doesn’t.
Best Slicer Cucumbers for Pennsylvania
Marketmore 76 remains the Pennsylvania standard for backyard slicers. It was developed at Cornell specifically for northeastern disease resistance — tolerant of scab, mosaic virus, and powdery mildew — and matures in 67 days, which works comfortably for all zones except the tightest mountain windows. Dark green, straight 8-inch fruits with a classic clean flavor. The one knock is that it’s monoecious, so you need pollinators (or plant near other cucumbers).
Straight Eight (63 days) is a time-tested open-pollinated slicer, excellent for seed saving. Good disease tolerance, though not as robust as Marketmore for late-season powdery mildew. Spacemaster 80 (60 days) is the compact slicer pick — a 24-inch bush type that works in raised beds and containers without sacrificing flavor. For growers in Zones 5a–5b who need speed, Bush Champion (55 days) is the fastest reliable slicer available.
Best Pickling Cucumbers for Pennsylvania
Pickling types need a different calculus than slicers — you want uniform fruit set, thinner skin for brine penetration, and the ability to harvest an entire batch within a tight window. National Pickling (53 days) delivers all three and has been the PA canning standard for decades. Blocky 3–4 inch fruits, reliable set, tolerates warm soil.
Boston Pickling (60 days) is the heirloom option — excellent for seed saving and a staple at PA farmers’ markets since the 1880s. Calypso (52 days) is the high-yield hybrid choice: gynecious (mostly female flowers) for concentrated fruit set, with solid disease resistance. If you’re serious about putting up a lot of pickles in a short window, Calypso is the most productive option in the lineup.
Burpless & Specialty Types
Diva (58 days) is the standout specialty cucumber for Pennsylvania. It’s parthenocarpic — it sets fruit without pollination — which is a genuine advantage during PA’s unpredictable early summer when pollinator activity is inconsistent. Thin-skinned, nearly seedless, mild flavor. The seedless quality means no bitterness (cucurbitacin is concentrated near seeds). Can be grown under row cover through flowering without sacrificing yield.
Armenian (65 days) is a long, ribbed pale-green cucumber that’s technically a melon but grows like a cucumber. It tolerates PA’s summer heat better than most cucumbers and produces heavily through August. Lemon (65 days) is the novelty pick — round, yellow, sweet, and productive — worth growing if you want something for farmers’ markets or CSA boxes.
Compact & Container Varieties
Container growing is underused by PA cucumber growers, but a 15-gallon container on a south-facing deck in Philadelphia or Reading can outperform in-ground plants in clay-heavy yards. Bush Pickle (45 days) is the fastest container producer, maturing before the July disease wave peaks. Patio Snacker (52 days) and Spacemaster 80 both produce full-sized fruit on 18–24 inch vines.
Key container requirement: consistent moisture. Containers dry out faster than ground beds, and cucumber bitterness is directly tied to moisture stress. Self-watering containers or daily checking in July heat are non-negotiable.
Full Variety Comparison Table
| Variety | Type | Days | Length | Disease Resistance | Best Zones | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marketmore 76 | Slicer | 67 | 8″ | Scab, CMV, PM | All | PA standard; Cornell-bred |
| Straight Eight | Slicer | 63 | 8″ | Moderate | 6a–7a | Good for seed saving |
| Spacemaster 80 | Compact slicer | 60 | 7.5″ | CMV | All | 24″ vine; raised beds/containers |
| Bush Champion | Compact slicer | 55 | 7″ | CMV | 5a–5b | Fastest compact slicer |
| Diva | Burpless/specialty | 58 | 6″ | PM, ALS | All | Parthenocarpic; row-cover friendly |
| Armenian | Specialty | 65 | 12–18″ | Heat tolerant | 6a–7a | Heat-tolerant; technically a melon |
| Lemon | Specialty | 65 | Round 3″ | Moderate | 6a–7a | Yellow; sweet; market novelty |
| National Pickling | Pickler | 53 | 3–4″ | Moderate | All | PA canning standard |
| Boston Pickling | Pickler | 60 | 3–4″ | Moderate | All | Heirloom; seed-saveable |
| Calypso | Pickler hybrid | 52 | 3–4″ | CMV, ALS, PM | All | Gynecious; highest yield |
| Bush Pickle | Container pickler | 45 | 3″ | Moderate | All | Fastest container pickler |
| Patio Snacker | Container slicer | 52 | 5″ | Moderate | All | 18″ vine; balcony-friendly |
PM = Powdery Mildew; CMV = Cucumber Mosaic Virus; ALS = Angular Leaf Spot
Zone-by-Zone Quick Picks
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best cucumber variety for Pennsylvania?
Why do my cucumber plants get white powder on the leaves in late summer?
Can I grow cucumbers in containers in Pennsylvania?
What is the difference between slicers and picklers?
How do I prevent cucumber beetles in my Pennsylvania garden?
When should I plant cucumbers in Pennsylvania?
Continue Reading
- When to Plant Cucumbers in Pennsylvania — exact planting windows for 12 PA cities
- How to Grow Cucumbers in Pennsylvania — soil prep, trellising, pest control, and harvest