digitS'
Garden Master
Here are most of my winter squash (Buttercup and Kabocha)

In 2019, most of the winter squash had died by now. All of the Cha Cha Kabocha died. I don't want to overstate this but garden location certainly seems to have made a difference in 2020.
The caveat is temperature differences. The electric/gas bill recently arrived. June temperatures for 2019 and 2020 are given as comparisons of both daily highs and daily lows, on average for each month. It's interesting to me that both lows and highs were more extreme last year than in June 2020. Yes. I noticed that! Those temperature bounces were likely the most important factor in destroying the squash in 2019.
Wind is a real factor in the neighborhood of my big veggie garden. I mitigated its effects this year. Just to the right of these squash plants is a dense pea trellis. It's something of a mess because it's been an especially windy growing season.
I've thought about setting up a temporary plastic fence as a wind barrier. (I've tried a plastic film tunnel in a distant garden but had problems because I'm not there all the time to open up the covering during the sunny parts of the day.) For several years, I have planted sunflowers on the windward side. I think that they are too late to provide wind protection in the early part of the growing season.
Imma gonna have lots of winter squash this year - Imma hoping
.
Steve

In 2019, most of the winter squash had died by now. All of the Cha Cha Kabocha died. I don't want to overstate this but garden location certainly seems to have made a difference in 2020.
The caveat is temperature differences. The electric/gas bill recently arrived. June temperatures for 2019 and 2020 are given as comparisons of both daily highs and daily lows, on average for each month. It's interesting to me that both lows and highs were more extreme last year than in June 2020. Yes. I noticed that! Those temperature bounces were likely the most important factor in destroying the squash in 2019.
Wind is a real factor in the neighborhood of my big veggie garden. I mitigated its effects this year. Just to the right of these squash plants is a dense pea trellis. It's something of a mess because it's been an especially windy growing season.
I've thought about setting up a temporary plastic fence as a wind barrier. (I've tried a plastic film tunnel in a distant garden but had problems because I'm not there all the time to open up the covering during the sunny parts of the day.) For several years, I have planted sunflowers on the windward side. I think that they are too late to provide wind protection in the early part of the growing season.
Imma gonna have lots of winter squash this year - Imma hoping
Steve