Gourd Drying and Cleaning

How to Dry Out and Clean Gourds for Use in Crafts and Hobbies

Jeff Gedgaud
Gourds make a terrific craft and hobby project, so many different types of things can be made out of them. Bird houses, candy dishes, little people or even pen and pencil holders.

With some simple household items and a tub or sink, you can clean and prepare gourds for your favorite craft project.

If you grow your own gourds you should pull them off the vines in the fall, you want to get them before they start to rot on the ground. You can do this the same time you pick your other similar vegetables, such as pumpkins and squash.

Leave several inches of stem on them to use for your various projects, many of the ones you can find in books or on the internet have a use for a long piece of stem on them.

Place the gourds in some kind of container that you can either throw out or clean out easily. A cardboard box also works, you can just throw the box when your done with the gourds. Then wait, yep, wait for the gourds to mold and get black on the outside. The room or area they are sitting in should be dry and have some kind of circulation so the whole room does not get mold growing in it. Just the gourds mold.

They will grow mold and such so you want to have some place like a shed or garage to put them in were they are not on the ground. This is important for the gourds, if they are sitting on dirt or something else that remains wet they will rot instead of just getting moldy.

After the spring check the gourds, they will have mold all over them and will be black or dark brown in color. They may also have some white on them in spots, this can be normal. The gourds will be very light and hollow. It will also be hard, you can thump it with your finger and it should not be soft. If it is soft, leave it be for some more time. If you leave it for more than a whole year it probably will not get hard.

The best way to tell when a gourds is done is by shaking it, if you can hear the seeds inside rattle, it is dry. Take the gourds out and get ready to wash them. You will need a large tub, wash basin or sink. You can wash a couple at a time or several at once. The easiest way is to do a bunch at once and get it done with.

First add the gourds you are going to wash and some hot water to the tub, you will want to completely cover the gourds. Also add a squirt of dish soap and some bleach, just a capful. But you say, they float. Yes, they do float, you need to sink them with something on top of the tub. I used a rack from the oven in my downstairs sink with some weights on the top to get them underwater.

However you figure out how to do this, just get them to stay underwater for an hour or so. Then you can start washing them. A scrub brush and brass scrubber work best. The brass scrubber is the kind that is very rough and you can buy at the grocery store. It is made of brass and looks like a pot scrubber but is for rough scrubbing. It works very well on the mold and skin of the gourd.

The gourd has a thin skin on it that has to be scrubbed off in order to use it for your crafts and hobbies. The skin is easy to tell when you start to get it all off. The whole gourd will be a uniform brown or tan when the skin is off. The skin turns a whitish color when it gets wet. You can do some and if you have to stop for some reason don't worry, you can let them dry and start over again.

Scrub gently and you will feel the gourd give in some spots. Just be extra careful in these spots. They are weak or rotten spots that you can use to your advantage later. If you break a gourd don't worry, the chances are you can find a use for the pieces later also.

When you have all the black, white and odd colored stuff off, rinse the gourd well. I just leave them sitting on a towel in the basement to dry. If you are doing this outside you can just set them out in the sun to dry. It should not take them long to dry out, overnight would be the longest needed.

You can now decorate or cut them however you want, my wife does the rest of these types of projects, I am the one who does the grunt work. She has painted and sold some very cute penguins, and a couple of bowl type gourds. You can use a Dremel tool with a rotary cutting bit to cut the gourds however you like.

There are several web sites that have project ideas and hints and tips for different hobbies using gourds. Here are some good ones:

http://www.americangourdsociety.org/

http://www.hgtv.com/hgtv/ah_hobbies_interests/article/0,1801,HGTV_3121_1374240,00.html

At the bottom of this page there are a bunch of other gourd sites:
http://www.twincreek.com/gourds/crafting.htm

You can do a lot of things to gourds, turn them into other shapes and such by cutting, use a rotary tool or small saw. The skin of the gourd is tough, almost like a thin wood and will cut just like it. You can make them into a bowl shape or a cup with a handle.

That is one use that the American Indians had for them, a scoop for water. They also used them for many useful things such as cups, bowls and holders for food and herbs. They would decorate their gourd utensils to make them not only useful but decorative.

You can paint them using a acrylic, enamel or almost any kind of artist or hobby paint. They can be spray painted or by using a brush. You can spray paint them for a nice even finish on the gourd. A couple of companies have a paint that looks like stone when you spray it on. This works well for gourds too. It looks unique and different on a gourd.

There are many things you can do with a gourd when you have them cleaned and washed. It only takes a little time and effort to clean them and they are an easy garden plant to grow. It is fun and easy to grow gourds and use them for your own crafts and hobbies.

Published by Jeff Gedgaud

I am a freelance writer honestly reviewing products I receive directly from manufacturers and marketing companies. Updates to my reviews can be found on my website JeffsReviews.com   View profile

  • Clean gourds after they have molded for several months.
  • Wash the mold off and scrub them with brass scrubbers.
  • Gourds can be cut and painted just like thin wood.
Gourds were once used as floats for fishing nets.

16 Comments

Post a Comment
  • Kat 12/8/2010

    Oh this is going to be fun ! thank you all for sharing this information ! I grew 10 plus gourds this year of two different styles. I can tell this is going to be an ongoing, Fun garden extra !

  • Judy Whitehair 8/31/2010

    Is there anyway that we can print your pages of instruction? We have grown several bird gourds in our garden and would like to make birdhouses out of them. We are not selling them, only for our own enjoyment.

    Thanks. Judy

  • Your name 11/26/2008

    This is the second time I have grown gourds...the 1st time was 5 years ago, and just for fun as it was my 1st garden...4 seasons later, as I am progressing on mybackyard market garden, I decided I should try them again as a craft instrument because I still had dozens of gourds that I missed/ignored in cleanup over the years and they were still hard! Laying in the Southern Idaho seasons for 5 years...so I grew gigantic and birdhouse gourds this year...plus accidentally ornamentals because I stepped on one, and after 5 years of weather it sprouted! I love gourds!

  • Cris 2/24/2008

    I'm very sorry to have to write this, but your explanation on how to dry gourds is all wrong... The best way to dry them is to leave them on the vine. Gourds need lots of air to properly dry, so leaving them outside is best. It won't hurt them to get wet from rain, nor will it hurt them to freeze. The stem of a gourd is very porous which is where much of the water inside the gourd will escape. Most experienced gourd growers won't pick them until they are completely dry. A gourd will be very light in weigh and the seeds will rattle inside when dry.

  • trish 2/20/2008


    I live in Missouri. I forgot about my gourds and left them on the vine for several freezes, then brought them into the garage and hung them up. The garage is not heated and gets down to 20 to 25 degrees. In 2 mos. they were completely dry. I also left one on the back deck in freezing rain, snow and several thunderstorms. Two days ago I went out to pick it up and it too is completley dry. But last year I picked them from the vine in early fall, brought them to the garage and within 3 mos. they were all rotten. So , go figure.

  • Dennis 11/15/2007

    People have some really good questions, but how in the world do you figure out where the answers?

  • Murrielle 11/6/2007

    Has anyone ever used Borax to hurry the drying process? I was thinking of cutting off the top and filling it with Borax just as you would in flower preservation, then burying it in a small bucket with additional borax.

  • Brock 10/18/2007

    do Ineed to drill holes in the bottom to dry my gourds?

  • Cindy 9/27/2007

    I have the same question as Mary Jane, but I do not see the answer. I live in Wisconsin and my garage is not heated, are the gourds going to be okay there to dry even through the bitter cold?

  • Debbie Leontitsi 9/25/2007

    Do they have to be cleaned out inside - or can you leave the seeds inside & not peirce the gourd???

Displaying Comments
Next »

To comment, please sign in to your Yahoo! account, or sign up for a new account.