Behold the World's Ugliest Pumpkin!

Pulsegleaner

Garden Master
Joined
Apr 18, 2014
Messages
3,539
Reaction score
6,938
Points
306
Location
Lower Hudson Valley, New York
A least I think it's a pumpkin (could be a gourd or a squash I suppose). Courtesy of a local Farmer's Market stand.

232323232%7Ffp93232%3Euqcshlukaxroqdfv332%3A5%3Enu%3D7965%3E7%3B9%3E25%3A%3EWSNRCG%3D3742%3A5%3A668335nu0mrj

232323232%7Ffp93232%3Euqcshlukaxroqdfv33%3A%3C%3A%3Enu%3D7965%3E7%3B9%3E25%3A%3EWSNRCG%3D3742%3A5%3A653335nu0mrj
 

digitS'

Garden Master
Joined
Dec 13, 2007
Messages
26,605
Reaction score
32,013
Points
457
Location
border, ID/WA(!)
Looks like somebody sat on it.

Repeatedly.

Ugly is a good choice for Halloween.

Steve
 

Pulsegleaner

Garden Master
Joined
Apr 18, 2014
Messages
3,539
Reaction score
6,938
Points
306
Location
Lower Hudson Valley, New York
Well, it definitely will stay intact until the holidays are over, both Halloween AND Thanksgiving (pumpkins are as much a part of that as they are of the other)* assuming it lasts that long. After that, who knows?

Actually, I rather doubt eating it is in the cards no matter what. With an unknown parentage, it's hard to tell if it is an eating pumpkin. A lot of ornamental gourds and carving pumpkins really aren't all that good to eat, what with the saponin content (anywhere from "slightly poisonous to just "will taste really terrible")

Additionally, based on some places where some of the skin is scraped (on some of the more prominent bumps) it appear that this thing has enough gourd in it's parentage to have a woody shell right under the surface, so there really isn't anything TO eat (except maybe the seeds, and I rather keep those to grow). So I'd say we're looking at a "no" with regards to eating
 

Pulsegleaner

Garden Master
Joined
Apr 18, 2014
Messages
3,539
Reaction score
6,938
Points
306
Location
Lower Hudson Valley, New York
No, a lot aren't. That actually includes most of the Halloween carving pumpkins. REAL pie/eating pumpkins tend to be paler orange (if they are orange at all, greens, blue greys whites and yellows are just as common) and flatter. And most canned pumpkin is in fact squash.

That actually results in a funny little fact I learned in my book collecting. I happen to collect Oz books from foreign countries. In the case of some of the Japanese ones, I can help noticing that the Japanese tend to draw Jack Pumpkinhead (second book on) with a much lighter colored and flatter head (occasionally, it's green) after I while I realized why; in Japan, the flatter eating type pumpkin is the only one they are used to! For similar reasons beans will generally be fava beans including the ones Jack climbs (though now that I think of it, Jacks beanstalk would HAVE to in fact be a fava; the story is older than the introduction of common beans to England.) and most of the corn has purple kernels sprinkled around (glutinous corn usually has some purple, even the commercial strains) Now if I could just figure out why they keep drawing Pan as the goat equivalent of a centaur.........
 
Top