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Bottle Gourds are typically grown for non-food use. The gourd is allowed to reach its full size on the plant and turned into a valuable container for grains or liquids. Mature fruits contain an extremely hard and waterproof rind when dried. The growing gourd may be constricted with bands to form any desirable shape. Designs scratched into the surface when the rind is still soft, will scar and remain in the mature fruit. Dried and waxed, the bottle gourd is waterproof and valuable for musical instruments, water jugs, kitchen equipment, planters, masks or floats for fishing nets. The immature fruits (before the rind hardens) can be picked and prepared like summer squash.

Bottle Gourd

Burmese

Produces very large oblong fruit up to 50 cm (20 in) in length.

Om Koi Long

Produces edible fruit up to 60 cm (24 in) in length.

ECHO Bottle Gourd

Produces light-green multiglobed fruit up to 15 cm (6 in) in length. Mature fruits can be made into bottles or birdhouses when dry

Caveman's Club

From Chiang Rai, Thailand. Wrinkled-looking on the outside with a crooked neck. Young fruit tastes similar to zucchini.

Bushel Gourd

This vigorous vine produces gourds the size of a basketball. Fruits are edible only when small but are generally not eaten. Grown mainly for the dried, hard gourd because of its thick shell. Gourds can be used as a storage container or for art work.