Luffa: Whether Eating Or For Bathing/Cleaning- It's Perfect For My Homestead

in gardening •  6 years ago 

One of three Luffa plants I have around the homestead.



This year I added three Luffa gourd plants to the Golden D Homestead.

According to Gardening Know How Luffa (Luffa aegyptiaca and Luffa acutangula), also known as loofah, vegetable sponge or dishcloth gourds, are grown mainly for their useful fibrous tissue skeleton. Young fruits can be eaten as as squash, used in stews or even used in place of cucumbers.





I first realized that Luffas are the same as the expensive loofah sponges you would buy in the store for showering and bathing; the ones that gently, yet scrub your skin. I had been researching some new homemade soap recipes and came across a recipe calling for adding Luffa gourds to the molds and I was intrigued.

You mean you can grow Luffa?

Why yes you can! I was thrilled and went online to search where to buy the seeds. I was NOT going to pay the high price for a Luffa/Loofah in the store to cut down when I now knew I could grow it myself.

For the price of one six-inch loofah gourd (which would give me six Luffas to use in the soap recipes) on Etsy, I could buy 25 seeds from a seed catalog. GREAT SAVINGS

I can buy 25 seeds and plant them; with the hopes of each seed producing an average of three gourds. Plus I can save the seeds from one season to the next. WIN-WIN

Food Versus Bath Sponge


When To Harvest Luffa For Food- when the gourd is no larger than 4 inches (12cm) in length

When To Harvest Luffa For Sponge- when it is over six inches (15cm) in length

When harvesting the gourd for a sponge, the outer skin will start to deteriorate exposing the fibrous skeleton and seeds. You can easily shake out the seeds to save for future plantings and carefully remove any remaining outer skin; leaving you with the sponge.

Aside from using as a shower or bath body sponge for exfoliating and cleansing, you can also use in the kitchen as a scrubby when washing dishes and for scouring pots and pans.

To learn how to harvest and prepare Luffa for being used as a sponge, check out the Gardening Know How page to see what needs to be done. The link also explains how to germinate the seeds for a better harvest.



General Luffa Facts


  • They can grow up to 15 feet in height
  • Prefer to grow up a trellis of some kind or fencing for support
  • Gourds grow approximately 8-12 inches in length
  • Like to be in FULL sun for best results
  • Remove first flowers (always male flowers) that emerge from the plant to promote better growth

The two Luffa gourds I have in the planter pots right now will be moved to the creek bed in the next week so that the roots can take better (producing a better harvest). I have the third Luffa already planted near the creek bed and with the hopes that the heat and humidity will subside over the next few days, I can get outside and do the other two transplants.

I plan on putting up some kind of pole or trellis for the gourd vines to latch onto and continue their upward growth. Not sure of the exact plan yet, but I'll be digging into my creativity to come up with something unique.

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Love this plant!!! I thought the same as you, that they came from the ocean. A neighbor years ago grew them and melted glycerine soap on them.
I can hardly wait to see how they do!!

This is so crazy! I guess I never realized that Loofa was a plant. I just thought it was a thing that was called Loofa. Very interesting post and great info. Thanks for sharing!

I know, right?!

I hate to say, and admit it, but I thought sponge/Loofah came from the ocean like this...
57c.jpg

Now I know better... and I can grow it!

I am totally with you. That would have been my guess too. Always awesome to learn new things though!

haha, me too! and I love the approach of growing them by themselves. Cheaper, and way more fun - I always feel I have such a different relationship to what I grow "by myself"...
Great post thanks @goldendawne

I love gourds of all kinds. They can be so functional. I haven't tried growing luffa's yet. But you're inspiring me to try.

howdy there @goldendawne! what an amazing plant, now I'll never look at loofahs in the store the same way, I bet the Native Americans used these like crazy. This was so educational, thank you!

So neat! I can't wait to see these plant's develop. I've never seen a luffa plant.

I did not really think about this. You can grow your own sponge! The whole family here uses them. Guess I really need to look into this. Thanks!

Our loofah plants are doing really well! I can't wait to make our own sponges and some will go out as christmas gifts

I'd really like to see an update when you turn them into sponges! But that will probably take some time I suppose. Any idea when they will start growing fruits? (don't think I read that in your post)

I was so amazed when I first found out that the loofa plant was the same thing that I was buying. It was actually through one of the homestead sites that I had read it.

I want to thank you and all the other homesteaders that enlighten me in so many different ways.

I know.... Me too. I never would have thought that until I started researching the sop recipes.

The homesteading and gardening community on steemit is AMAZING!

Gourds are so cool looking, and weird too. That's awesome you were able to find some seeds. It brings me back to reading Piers Anthony books. Xanth. A fantasy world that was entered by travelling through a gourd. :)

We grow luffa here in the tropics and I can guarantee that I get bushels of the luffa gourd. With three plants you should have sufficient to use some, eat some and sell a bunch.

I had such washcloths in my childhood, and I knew that they were grown. But never, never seen this plant! Thank you for the photo and story @goldendawne

I never knew you could grow loofahs like this.

I have never seen the seeds here in the UK so I am guessing they may not like the British climate. I wonder if they would make it in the polytunnel?


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What an awesome plant :o definitely buying some seeds, I'll need to get a new pot for it :D

I was so happy when I realized it was something that can be grown. Someone else had mentioned it earlier this year but I haven't put the plan into practice yet. I am looking forward to updates on how successful growing for your first time is, yield and all that.

I have plans to grow these as well. I was amazed that I could grow my own sponges!

Ours grew like crazy but have not produced any fruit