
| Gourd | ||
|
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| Variety | Comments | |
|---|---|---|
| P | Birdhouse or Bottle | 12-14" tall. 5" diameter. Size and shape will vary on the same plant. Stand them upright when they are young and growing to form a gourd that will sit on its base. |
| P | Dipper | On the ground the dipper will grow to 2', when trellised to 4'. The bulb end is 6–8" in diameter. The neck may be knotted as the very young gourd grows. |
| P | Dishcloth or Luffa | This is the famous luffa from which to make a scrubber for bath or shower. The 12–18" long gourds grow on delicate vines which are not attractive to the usual cucurbit pests. |
| P | Goblin Eggs | This delightful, unique mix is best described by the photo—there are a few hundred words there. Maturity is early for gourds, about 100 days, so Goblin Eggs can be grown where the season is short. |
| P | Large Mixed | The most popular large gourds including Calabash, Dipper, Sugar Trough, and others. Needs long growing season. |
| P | Pear Bicolored | Pear–shaped, smooth, hard gourds. Top half usually yellow, bottom half green, white stripes run entire length of gourd. |
| P | Shenot Crown of Thorns | Finger–like pro tu ber anc es form a crown on the globe–shaped fruit. Cream and green colors. |
| OG,P | Small Mixed | A variety of the popular, colorful, small gourds for decorative arrangements. |

Birdhouse or Bottle
Goblin Eggs
Small Mixed