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Luffa |
Healing Garden |
Form: Vine
Luffa on rotunda at Moody Demonstration Garden
Seasonality: annual
Size: to 30 feet or more
Flowers: the plant is diecious, having both male and female flowers. The rather large male flowers are bright yellow and occur in clusters. The female flowers are solitary and have the tiny slender ovary attached.
Fruit: a gourd, soft and edible when young, a tough mass when mature. See notes below
Stems: fast growing vine
Range/Origin: the tropics, believed to have originated in southern Asia or India
Hardiness: Not cold hardyLANDSCAPE VALUE:
CULTURAL REQUIREMENTS:
- a large vine useful on an arbor to provide shade
- interesting gourd with many uses
- Exposure: full sun
- Water: regular
- Soil: average soil
- Propagation: seed
- Maintenance: The plant is very large and needs to be supported. The use of a strong trellis, a chain link fence or an arbor is recommended
Luffa Gourd; Photo by D. Post NOTES: Link to an article about Luffa http://www.luffa.info/
Gourd, Luffa -- Luffa cylindrica (L.) Roem., Luffa aegyptica Mill., and Luffa acutangula (L.) Roxb.1
James M. Stephens2
Luffa is the genus name of a group of gourds also known as vegetable sponges, dishcloth gourds, running okra, strainer vine, Chinese okra, California okra, and loofah. Two species are commonly grown in this country and throughout Florida. Angled luffa is L. acutangula, while the smooth-fruited version is L. cylindrica, or the same as L. aegyptica.
Angled luffa.
smooth-fruited version.DESCRIPTION
Both luffas have value as food items, but are seldom eaten in Florida. Most gardeners grow them for their fibrous interior, which is useful as a rough cloth or sponge for cleaning and scouring. The two species are somewhat similar in appearance. Both are vigorous, climbing, annual vines with several lobed cucumber-like leaves. When crushed, the leaves give off a rank odor.
Both male and female flowers occur on the plant with a much greater number of male flowers. The rather large male flowers are bright yellow and occur in clusters. The female flowers are solitary and have the tiny slender ovary attached. Angled luffa flowers appear later in the day than the smooth type and stay open through the night. Bees pollinate the flowers. Leaves are covered with short stiff hairs. Smooth luffa fruits are shaped like cucumbers but are larger, 1-2 feet in length and 4-5 inches thick. The exterior is green, sometimes mottled, and smooth with longitudinal lines. Fruits of the angled luffa are characterized by sharp, elevated ridges running the length of the pods. The interiors of both are cucumber-like when immature, but quickly develop a network of fibers surrounding a large number of flat blackish seeds. Smooth luffa seeds are a bit more narrow and have a pitted appearance.
CULTURE
Luffa is a warm season, cold sensitive genus originating in India. Both species grow throughout the tropics, including subtropical Florida. Luffa is grown mostly as a novelty in Florida gardens. However, some have been tried commercially for the sale of the sponges. Being cold sensitive, luffas should be grown during the warm season.
Luffa requires a lot of space, so plant seeds in hills spaced 6 feet apart or space plants about 3-4 feet apart in a single row. Provide a trellis or plant along a fence. Prepare the soil and fertilize just as you would for squash or cucumbers. Fruits touching the soil develop decay so mulch will be helpful.
USE
Small (less than 6 inches long) young luffa gourds are used as a vegetable either prepared like squash or eaten raw like cucumbers. Some varieties are sweeter than others, particularly of the smooth type. Bitter types should not be eaten, as some poisonous properties have been reported.
However, best sponges come from mature-green fruits, although dry fruits may be used. The fruits should be soaked for several days and then peeled. Once cleaned, the sponges should be bleached and then dried in the sun. Sponges have been used for cleaning, filtering, and bathing.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Footnotes
1. This document is Fact Sheet HS-604, a series of the Horticultural Sciences Department, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida. Revised for CD-ROM: May 1994.
2. James M. Stephens, Professor, Horticultural Sciences Department, Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville FL 32611.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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This page compiled for the Moody Demonstration Garden by D. Post Aug 2004; last updated 14 Feb 2007
Sunset Western Garden Book; Sunset Books Inc.; Menlo Park, CA 94025, 6th ed.
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