82-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 24, 1993 This gourd hat took a sec ond prize for Ruth Sweitzer at a Gourd Society Show. Out Of Your Gourd JOYCE BUPP York Co. Correspondent DOVER (York Co.) With the advent of the planting season, gardeners are tuning their tillers, honing their hoe blades, and sow ing onions, carrots and peas. In the spirit of trial and adven ture. many gardeners sample new variety introductions and perhaps a new species or two each season. It was this quest for something a little different that started York County gardener Ruth Sweitzcr off into her gourd venture. Ruth Swcitzer, Admire Road, was reading a Burpee seed catalog in bed one January night 18 years ago when she ran across the firm’s introduction of “lagenaria” gourd seed. Lagenaria are not the small, colorful, ornamental gourds popu lar for fall decorating, but large gourds historically used by cul tures around the world to make all sorts of practical storage containers. “I am absolutely fascinated with these gourds,” says the Dover gardener now often referred to locally as “The Gourd Lady.” Gourds have become a focal point of Ruth Sweitzer’s life, filling not only her garden and her house but a large part of her lime as well. “After growing them, giving them away, for three or four years....well, the Lord guides you if you listen,” Ruth believes. “I heard a television show one day dial featured two women from Cleveland, Georgia, who were doing things with gourds.” Ruth Sweilzer, shortly thereaf ter, drove south to Cleveland, Georgia, and located the two gourd enthusiasts. Their know ledge, encouragement, sugges tions for growing and creative use of gourds further propelled her interest and skills. She picked up tips on small, specialized tools for working with gourds, including the use of keyhole saws for culling and carving the hard shells of the lagenaria species. Now, one can glance in any direction in Ruth Sweitzer’s taste fully decorated Dover farmhouse and see a gourd or more likely, several gourds. “You can make anything from a gourd,” says Ruth mattcr-of factly. A tour of her cozy home confirms it. For starter ideas, nearly every window boasts a hanging plant in a hanging gourd planter. Attrac- Ruth displays one of her many hanging planters styled Gourds keep Ruth Sweitzer much too busy for a rocking from gourds. Someday, she would like to open a gourd chair. Large ones she grows include the dipper type and a museum. bushel type perfect for designs like a cat house and the basket styled by another gourd enthusiast. live dried arrangements incorpo rate unusually-shaped gourds as both base container and a major part of the design line. Large bushel gourds fashioned into bowls and baskets serve as both ornamentals and holders of every thing from magazines to Easter decorations. One of the most dramatic and useful creations is a full-length wired and working floor lamp, created from a long, straight necked dipper gourd. Even the cal has a house carved from what else? a bushel gourd. Songbirds around the Sweitzer farm also benefit from gourd bird feeders and a favorite creation of Ruth’s, wren houses. Ruth fashions wren houses from both birdhouse gourds and dipper gourds grown on the ground. By allowing some dipper gourds to grow on the ground, rather than on an arbor or trellis, the long necks curl and curve around the small gourd body, pro viding perfect perching spots sort of porches for wrens using the houses. Sanding gourds creates a very fine dust which can cause health irritations to some hobbyists if inhaled over long periods of time. In her basement workshop, between piles of cured gourds for future projects, Ruth has installed an air-cleaning system which she activates while sanding or spray scaling. Adjacent to her workshop is a deep tub where she can soak and scrub cured gourds for her numer ous craft uses and shows. Ruth frequently presents demonstra tions and programs on gourds and gourd crafts and recently taught her first class. For many years, Ruth grew as much as two acres of large gourds, later reducing her plantings as her supply of gourds on hand increased. Among the many types she cultivates are giant bushel gourds and smaller, slightly flat tened round gourds, dipper gourds, birdhouse gourds, even caveman gourds. This last is a club-shaped, slightly elongated type gourd covered with wart-like protrusions. Much of Ruth’s extensive Out of her gourds, Ruth has devised such diverse creations as, from left, a Snoopy mask, arrangement with dipper gourd grown on the ground, sleigh, Santa and kettle gourd. A tobacco gourd, a type used by native Americans for storing tobacco pro ducts, at right has been attractively painted. wmesfead tA/c(es knowledge and lore about gourds has been learned through her own experimentation and reading a wealth of printed materials about these “fruits.” Early in her gourd-growing trials, Ruth found that planting commercially-offered gourd seed of certain advertised varieties did not necessarily result in mature fruits of that type. Gourds com monly cross-pollenate; unless the seed purchased is “true,” what a gardener thinks is planted and what the end of the season yields may be two entirely different results. “Bushel and dipper gourds are reliable reproducers,” she says of these two mainstay types for her creative uses. “One year, I wanted to grow round gourds and got a shape of gourd called a ‘zucca’ instead. I threw them away.” Then Ruth adds with a laugh, “Sometime later, 1 went back ad retrieved them after seeing what could be done with them.” These large gourds are a some- what tropical species and need a long growing season, so Ruth starts seedlings inside in April, planting in peat pots. About a week before Mothers’ Day, the sccdmgs are planted outside. Since the weather is often still var iable, she protects the tender see dlings with topped-out plastic jugs or large flower pots turned upside down with the bottoms removed. “Gourds should be grown in good, fertile soil, with lots of dry manure worked in,” Ruth advises. “They shouldn’t be grown more than two years in the same place, or diseases will build up in the soil. “Seedlings should have 1 at least four leaves before they’re set out side,” is her experience. “For about a month, the plants will just ‘sit there’; that’s okay, because they’re developing the root sys tem. After that, vines will grow quickly.” When the vines are about four yards long, Ruth cuts the ends off, to encourage the development of side growth. For large bushel gourds, or encouraging larger fruits of nearly any gourd, only one or two fruits per vine should be allowed to grow and mature. Gourds can be grown on plastic, and Ruth also likes to use a heavy mulch to hold moisture in the soil. For watering during dry spells, a sceper hose, which puts water right at the plants’ roots, is prefer able over sprinkler hoses which wet the leaves and vines, encour aging disease growth. “Pray for a good, hot summer if you want to grow gourds,” grins this gardening veteran. Excessive moisture causes mildew and rot ting, a real problem during the 1992 growing season. In fact, Ruth notes that last year was not a favorable gourd production year anywhere around the world. The extreme wetness of the summer kept the gourds from developing the thick, strong shells necessary for most uses. Gourds should be hardening on (Turn to Page B 3)