Dictionary Definition
gourd
Noun
1 bottle made from the dried shell of a bottle
gourd [syn: calabash]
2 any of numerous inedible fruits with hard
rinds
3 any vine of the family Cucurbitaceae that bears
fruits with hard rinds [syn: gourd
vine]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Any of the climbing or trailing plants from the family Cucurbitaceae, which includes watermelon, pumpkins and cucumbers.
- A fruit from a plant that is a member of the Cucurbitaceae family.
- The dried and hardened shell of a gourd fruit, made into a drinking vessel, bowl, spoon, or other objects designed for use or decoration.
- head
- I got so stoned last night. I was out of my gourd.
Translations
Any of the climbing or trailing plants from the
family Cucurbitaceae
- Korean: 박 (bag, bak)
A fruit from a plant that is a member of the
Cucurbitaceae family
- Korean: 박 (bag, bak)
head
External links
Extensive Definition
- This article refers to the dried fruit shell. For the alternative country musical group of a similar name, see The Gourds.
A gourd is a plant of the family Cucurbitaceae,
or a name given to the hollow, dried shell of a
fruit in the Cucurbitaceae
family of plants of the
genus Lagenaria.
Most commonly, gourds are the product of the
species Lagenaria
siceraria'' (the calabash or African bottle gourd), native to
Africa, and at a very early date spread throughout the world by
human migrations. This species may be the oldest plant domesticated
by humans.
Gourds can be used as a number of things,
including bowls or bottles. Gourds are also used as
resonating chambers on certain musical
instruments including the berimbau and many other
stringed
instruments and drums.
Instruments of this type are fairly common to the Caribbean. Gourds
are also used as a tool for sipping yerba mate by
means of a bombilla, in
Chile,
Uruguay,
Argentina,
Paraguay
and Brazil,
where it is called "cuia" (kOOya). Birdhouse gourds are commonly
used in southern USA for group housing for purple
martins, which reputedly help control mosquitoes. "Gourd" can also
refer to the live fruit before it is dried, or to the entire plant
that produces that fruit.
Cultivation
Day-blooming gourds are pollinated the same as
squash,
and commercial plantings should have bee
hives supplied. Night blooming gourds are pollinated by
moths, which are normally
present in adequate supply unless they are drawn off by night
lights in the area.
Gourds were the earliest plant species
domesticated by humans and were originally used by man as
containers or vessels before clay or stone pottery, and is
sometimes referred to as "nature's pottery". The original and
evolutional shape of clay pottery
is thought to have been modeled on the shape of certain gourd
varieties.
Recent DNA analyses of bottle gourds found at
several sites throughout the Americas has resolved a long-standing
mystery, as well as adding evidence establishing the early date of
domestication of the bottle gourd plant. As the bottle gourd is
native to Africa and not the Americas, archeologists previous to
the analyses could only speculate that it had probably floated
across the Atlantic. But upon examining the DNA, they found that
the American samples most closely matched the varieties of the
African bottle gourd found in Asia, not Africa. It was thus
concluded that the bottle gourd had been deliberately brought by
early Asian migrants to the Americas, at a time pre-dating the
domestication of plants for food anywhere on Earth.
Other uses
In addition to utilitarian uses, gourds have been
assigned various other functions throughout history in various
cultures. Very early specimens of squash shells discovered (for
example, in Peru) indicate the use
of squashes as means of recording events of the time. In North
America, the carving of pumpkins and some other
squashes into Jack-o-Lanterns
is a popular cultural activity during Halloween.
Generally, gourds are used more for utilitarian
uses than for food. Only a few varieties are actually harvested for
consumption, mostly in Asia. The shell of the gourd, when dried,
has a wooden appearance. Gourd "wood" is essentially cellulose that has no grain,
varying in thickness from paper-thin to well over an inch. Drying
gourds, which takes months in some cases, causes the internal
contents (seeds and fruit matter) to dry out completely, although
seeds are often still capable of germination. For the uninitiated,
cutting open a dried gourd (which can be done with a craft knife or
miniature jig-saw) can present hazards; the resulting dust is
extremely fine and can cause respiratory problems, requiring
adequate protection. A bitter taste or smell is typically evident
when opening a gourd that has not completely dried out
inside.
It has also been found that gourd skins were used
to replace missing parts of skulls back in the Neolithic times
as part of primitive surgery. This is seen as evidence of prostheses, that is,
artificial bones made of very fine gold sheet and gourd skins,
which were inserted in the skull under the skin or to cover the
hole left by the operation.
The harder outer surface lends the gourd to a
wide variety of creative appeals, including carving, pyrography, sculpture,
basketry, masks, musical instruments, and much more. A steadily
growing following has emerged in the United States and other
Western countries for Gourd art and
craft-related purposes. There are many different types of
decorative gourds. They include spoon gourds, spoon bicolor, orange
warted, and striped pear. The spoon gourd ripens from the top to
the bottom. A baby spoon gourd is green and as it grows it changes
color. A yellow color overlaps the green and creates a two colored
gourd. For decorative purposes the harvester can cut the gourd from
the plant early when it is still two colors.
White gourd juice is also a common beverage
retailed in China and Chinese outlets outside China. It has a
unique, smokey taste.
See also
Footnotes
External links
gourd in Japanese: 瓢箪
gourd in German:
Kalebasse