I SEE PERPETUAL, DEEP LAUGHTER IN GOURDS. For that reason, all are welcome at my place; in fact, one moved in with me a few winters ago and hasn’t budged since. Meet ‘Bule’ (pronounced boo-lay). With seed-catalog season imminent, it seems like a good time for introductions to such great (if oddball) botanical companions. Ready to get acquainted?
I’m a pumpkin, squash and gourd lover bigtime, but this bumpy-faced creature is a particular favorite among the many gourds I’ve known and grown. ‘Nest Egg,’ whom I’ve introduced on A Way to Garden before, is another particular heartthrob.
Unlike ‘Nest Egg,’ which is more closely related to summer squash and those colorful mixed gourds of autumn farmstands, ‘Bule’ and its similarly warty but longer-shaped cousin ‘Verruqueuse’ or ‘African Warty’ are in another genus and species altogether. The former are Cucurbita pepo subspecies ovifera, New World types with squash-like yellow flowers. My darling ‘Bule’ is Lagenaria siceraria, originally hailing from Africa and bearing beautiful white flowers on very ambitious vines.
L. siceraria includes the familiar bottle gourd; the genus name Lagenaria derives from the Greek and Latin words for flask. My guy looks more like a giant apple (and in fact ‘Bule’ is called the ‘Blistered Apple’ in some nations, I have read).
Speaking of reading: Yes, I went down the digital rabbit hole again the last few days. That’s what happens when I go to post a simple photo of a plant I like and a little information about it. I can’t help myself, and I quickly start reading, and reading, and reading. Next time I look up, it’s days later, and I’ve studied gourds in philately (like the African stamp at left), gourd poetry, gourds in archaeological digs and gourd Read more on awaytogarden.com