You can generally tell by how the flower is attached; male flowers will be right off the stem while female flowers will have a little bulb at the base. You may wish to cut back the flowers that are there currently, to encourage more vegetative growth. Getting a fruit to maturity is energy intensive for plants, and more leaves means more energy to make them when the plant grows a new set of flowers.
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Either low on nitrogen or the soil pH is way off. You should have a lot more leaves before it starts flowering, and they should be greener. Some fish fertilizer might pep it up.
Alright I think I'm super low on nitrogen then, crap. What is that, a liquid?
It can be either. You can get slow release non urea based osmocote stuff for pumpkins as they are very hungry. Consider putting some peas or beans in there after the pumpkin is done to help recruit fungi to convert your nitrogen into a useable form. Since it's your first year you might have just had too young compost
Yes. You don't have to use fish fertilizer, any nitrogen fertilizer should do the trick. I find fish fertilizer helps build good soil over time though. Also, it won't burn your plants, so it's a bit more user friendly than chemical fertilizer.
Usually it comes in a plastic jug and you have to dilute it quite a bit before using. Just follow the instructions on the package.
Once the pumpkins start growing it's gonna get pretty potassium hungry. You can switch over to a seaweed fertilizer to get nice big pumpkins. But it needs lots of leaves and plenty of sun first, to fix the necessary carbon.
Alright my fish fertilizer came in today (lordy what a smell) and I've fertilized. I will update in a week or so! Thanks!