Pulsegleaner
Garden Master
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2014
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- Location
- Lower Hudson Valley, New York
Hi all
Among the thing I am planning to put in this spring are some winter melons a.k.a. wax gourds, ash gourds (Benicasia hispida). It took me a while but I finally managed to get my hands on some seed for a small fruited one (I may love winter melon soup, but the standard varieties 40+ pound fruit weight makes dealing with a whole melon (let alone several of them) a prohibitive idea. And it's not like I have dozen of relative to invite over (even if it wasn't pandemic time). One or two pound fruits are more like it.
So does anyone have any experience with this vegetable? One thing that concerns me is the fact that they say that, despite the name, it likes warm conditions ( it STORES through the winter, but it's unclear if it grows somewhere where there actually IS a winter, or they grow it south and export it north.)
I already learned that hairy gourd is just immature winter melon (the same way zucchini is just immature summer squash)
Among the thing I am planning to put in this spring are some winter melons a.k.a. wax gourds, ash gourds (Benicasia hispida). It took me a while but I finally managed to get my hands on some seed for a small fruited one (I may love winter melon soup, but the standard varieties 40+ pound fruit weight makes dealing with a whole melon (let alone several of them) a prohibitive idea. And it's not like I have dozen of relative to invite over (even if it wasn't pandemic time). One or two pound fruits are more like it.
So does anyone have any experience with this vegetable? One thing that concerns me is the fact that they say that, despite the name, it likes warm conditions ( it STORES through the winter, but it's unclear if it grows somewhere where there actually IS a winter, or they grow it south and export it north.)
I already learned that hairy gourd is just immature winter melon (the same way zucchini is just immature summer squash)