Ancestors

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 19:04

In honor of Halloween, it's time for GOURD FACTS.

For every donation to the link below I will post one (1) fact about gourds, pumpkins, squash, and all the ways we use them. It's a really useful family of plants!

https://secure.actblue.com/donate/mastodon

=> View attached media

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 19:15

We don't know for sure, but two things are definitely true about bottle gourds.

-They float

-They can dry up & hold their seeds for a really long time.

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 19:15

Especially for plants in arid areas, floating is a good strategy to spread your seeds!

  1. Grow near water (or a wash where water flows sometimes).

  1. Grow fruits & let them dry up into little buoys full of seeds.

  1. Wait for a flood to carry them wherever else the water goes.

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 21:18

I see you guys! We're finishing up one last event, should be back a little before 6 👋

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 22:46

The first members of the squash family probably weren't grown for food. They were hard and/or bitter!

Instead, people probably first started keeping them around to dry out & use as containers.

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 22:46

After all, you can eat a lot of things. But there are only so many lightweight, waterproof containers out there.

If baskets are too leaky and pottery's too heavy for what you need to do, bottle gourds are your best bet!

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 22:47

ack o'lanterns are from Europe, but squash aren't.

So before Europe found squash, they were making jack o'lanterns out of root vegetables. Turnips, rutabagas, beets, etc.

Credit where it's due, they really nail the "creepy" vibe.

=> View attached media | View attached media

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 22:47

When people first started eating squash, we're pretty sure it wasn't the flesh- it was the seeds!

Squash's seeds are oily & tasty. The flesh on early squash was still hard, bitter, or both.

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 22:48

Eventually, as people started growing a lot of squash, some of them would naturally have flesh that was less bitter. People got adventurous, started cooking it, and selecting for sweeter & sweeter fruits.

And now there's edible squash!

=> View attached media

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 22:49

The classic "Cinderella" pumpkins don't do well in tropical and subtropical conditions.

But calabaza-type squash love it.

=> View attached media

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 22:50

Had good luck with Kang Kob pumpkins in the NC sandhills.

Do they look weird? Sure. Are they tasty & grow well? Yes! They're sturdy and handle our challenging weather & soil really well.

=> View attached media

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 23:15

Seminole pumpkins have a RANGE on looks & preferred weather. The Seminole people bred them to handle Florida's steamy weather- and then the US forced a lot of Seminoles to Oklahoma in 1849.

So now some Seminole pumpkin lines are adapted to Florida, and some to Oklahoma.

=> View attached media | View attached media | View attached media

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 23:15

GIANT PUMPKINS let's talk about em

=> View attached media

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 23:16

You have to put them on a pallet when they're still a little baby pumpkin. So you can forklift them out of the field.

=> View attached media

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 23:16

A little over a decade ago, giant pumpkin growers were chasing a 2,000lb pumpkin. A one-ton squash.

Now, we've blown through that and growers are eyeing the 3,000lb limit.

We have no idea what the maximum size for a pumpkin IS.

https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2024/10/giant-pumpkin-world-record/680337/

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 23:17

Giant pumpkins usually wind up getting smushed by gravity. It's kind of charming. A "yeah I'm huge but I'm tired, be nice to me" energy.

=> View attached media

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Written by Sarah Taber on 2024-10-31 at 23:18

And it's trick or treating o'clock! Showtime! Thanks for participating, have a good night everyone!

=> View attached media

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from sarahtaber@mastodon.online

Toot

Written by BoneHouseWasps🔶🇬🇧🇪🇺 on 2024-11-01 at 10:18

@sarahtaber Had to look up what a rutabaga was - we call theme 'swedes' in the UK.

MY favourite pumpkin fact is that Big Jim Martin from Faith no More is (or was) a champion pumpkin farmer.

https://blabbermouth.net/news/former-faith-no-more-guitarist-grows-monster-pumpkins

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from BonehouseWasps@mastodon.social

Descendants

Written by Martin Owens :inkscape: on 2024-11-01 at 15:09

@BonehouseWasps @sarahtaber

We call them turnips up north. Yellow turnips.

=> More informations about this toot | More toots from doctormo@floss.social

Proxy Information
Original URL
gemini://mastogem.picasoft.net/thread/113407183569937030
Status Code
Success (20)
Meta
text/gemini
Capsule Response Time
452.153935 milliseconds
Gemini-to-HTML Time
6.964468 milliseconds

This content has been proxied by September (ba2dc).