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[email protected] 01-10-2007 04:05 PM

drying gourds
 
Does anyone have some good suggestions for drying gourds. I have read
about placing them on screens but I have so many. Do I wait until a
certain time to take them from the garden? I would appreciate any
help. Thank you in advance. Jo


Omelet 01-10-2007 05:05 PM

drying gourds
 
In article .com,
wrote:

Does anyone have some good suggestions for drying gourds. I have read
about placing them on screens but I have so many. Do I wait until a
certain time to take them from the garden? I would appreciate any
help. Thank you in advance. Jo


I just leave them hanging on the vines from the fence. ;-)
They dry just fine.

As far as I know, no matter what you do to them, they will still end up
with some black markings from mold but it does not do any damage to the
shells or seeds.

One other way I did birdhouse gourd drying once that worked well was to
take several that were ripe and full sized and lay them on top of the
insulation up in my attic.

Worked fine and the resulting seeds were viable.

House wrens in my yard LOVE the gourd birdhouses. Just be sure to drill
large drain holes in the bottom of the gourds. I drill 3 of them at
about 1/3" across.
--
Peace, Om

Remove _ to validate e-mails.

"Human nature seems to be to control other people until they put their foot down." -- Steve Rothstein

Ferd Farkel 03-10-2007 05:34 PM

drying gourds
 
On Oct 1, 11:05 am, wrote:
Does anyone have some good suggestions for drying gourds. I have read
about placing them on screens but I have so many. Do I wait until a
certain time to take them from the garden? I would appreciate any
help. Thank you in advance. Jo


Wait until after the killing frost. Let the weeds and other
vegetation die back so you can see how many you grew.
Leave them in the field, or harvest if the squirrels take a
liking to them -- this proves the little *******s can't taste
bitter, no matter how intense.

Cut the umbilical cords a few inches out. This helps them
dry faster for some mysterious reason. Maybe the gourds
scab over if you cut the stems flush.

Don't worry if they get moldy. They're supposed to. It adds
character after you wash off the gourds prior to making them
into something. You'll see mold spots on gourd resonators
on Indian sitars. Stain or (even better) a tinted finish brings
out the pattern nicely. Try equal parts varnish, linseed oil, and
paint thinner, with a dash of artist's oil paint for color, rubbed in
and buffed out, several coats until you build a nice sheen.



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