Soak seeds for 24 hours or overnight by placing them in a cup of warm water.
This will speed up the process of the seeds sprouting; otherwise, it can take up to two weeks for the process to begin.
Sow at 2cm deep into seed-raising mix with one seed per small pot or individual seedling containers.
You can use a seedling tray, but they must be transplanted before they grow their first leaves (the leaves that come after the sun leaves), as they don’t like to have their roots disturbed.
They like to be kept in a warm sunny spot out of the frost.
Their growth habit is very much like a cucumber, melon, or pumpkin plant (they’re all in the cucurbit family).
They are best planted about a metre apart.
Bottle gourds are greedy feeders, so prepare your well-turned soil with lots of compost, then feed every two weeks with something like liquid seaweed.
They can grow on the ground, but this is not ideal, because gourds will rot if they come into contact with wet ground.
That is when it’s ready to start cleaning, creating, vanishing, or painting.
They make lovely bird houses, too.
Coloured corn
Coloured corn can be very decorative. Photo / Unsplash, Markus Winkler
Indian corn, glass corn, rainbow corn, flint corn, ornamental corn, blue corn…you may have heard of some coloured corn referred to by some of these names.
They are fun to grow and harvest, and then pile up in a trug or old basket.
Grow like regular corn and make sure you do your homework when making your selection; some coloured corn can be used for popping, while some can be ground into flour to make blue tortillas.
One thing is for sure, they are a great talking piece when you have visitors!