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Annual shipment of inedible square melons gets underway in western Japan

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This year’s shipment of ornamental square watermelons to wholesalers began Wednesday in western Japan.

The shipment of cubic watermelons from Zentsuji in Kagawa Prefecture is expected to continue until late July, with each fruit priced at around ¥10,000 ($90).

Square watermelons, which are harvested while still unripe, are not edible and are purchased generally as ornaments at such places as department stores and fruit shops.

Workers check cube-shaped watermelons in Zentsuji, Kagawa Prefecture, on Wednesday, as the season's first shipments of the fruit start. | KYODO
Workers check cube-shaped watermelons in Zentsuji, Kagawa Prefecture, on Wednesday, as the season’s first shipments of the fruit start. | KYODO

Shaped into about 18-centimeter cubes by being grown in transparent plastic containers with iron frames that allow for sufficient sunlight, the development of such watermelons started about 50 years ago, with the aim of creating a fruit that was easy to store in a refrigerator.

The number of square-watermelon growers has since declined to seven due to a lack of successors, while low temperatures since April this year saw the product harvested a week later than usual. Each watermelon weighs about 6 kilograms.

“I hope people will enjoy looking at these watermelons and blow away the summer heat,” said Toshiyuki Yamashita, 73, who was involved in the development of square watermelons with his father.

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