Slopey1884 t1_j9a5yem wrote
I want to try growing loofa squashes, so I can make my own loofas. Is that weird? We enjoyed having our own heirloom cherry tomatoes and shishito peppers so we will probably do that again. Last year I also did cucuzza squash and butternut squash. Having both kind of took over my growing space. Will not repeat this year.
simple_syrup t1_j9amtk6 wrote
I grew loofa two or 3 years ago (the Guerilla garden nearby grew them last year and unfortunately did no research). Our season is just about too short for the necessary process (then drying out on the stalk), though I was able to pull it off and netted about 10 good loofah. I’m a soso gardener and like experimenting but my loofah project was able to succeed due to my experience with cucumbers and existing equipment for other garden projects. I don’t think I would’ve been able to pull it off semi successfully without doing extensive research - and I did most of mine on the internet .
My novice tips from experience:
(1) Start germination early inside - heating pads and automatic lighting helps. I think I started them some number of weeks before the frost. (Aka: start yesterday, lol)
(2) You’ll (probably) need only one plant. If your plant is happy it will be a prolific producer and you won’t need two plants. You can eat the young ones, and prepare to do so, as not all of them will make it to size for their fibers.
(3) If you do end up with multiple plants (hell, it was a struggle with the one plant I had) make sure you have adequate support for them! My neighbor who tried growing them last year is a seasoned urban gardener but the trellis he had was not strong enough to support his two plants.
(4) The season is too short here - so I had to quickly utilize the garlic curing/drying racks, our sunroom, and two fans to dry out the 20 or so that were big and seemingly fiberous enough too make it through to the end.
*Excuse any weird formatting & typos as this was typed up on my phone.
FuzzPunkMutt t1_j9a7y5w wrote
Growing loofas seems pretty cool, actually. I'd like to try it as well.
Slopey1884 t1_j9a87yx wrote
I figure it can’t be much harder than cucuzza, which was easy to grow but underwhelming to eat.
ackitty-ack t1_j9alf46 wrote
I tried loofahs last year! I had really nice plants going but we didn’t get to harvest since we planted a little too late. definitely start loofah sooner than later
Badboysrisri t1_j9con02 wrote
If we are thinking of the same plant, it makes some great curries and are exceptionally healthy. They grow high yields assuming the deer don’t get them!
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