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Treating Your Pumpkins So They Last Longer and Environmentally Safe

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Straw Pumpkin Gourd Red Yellow Autumn Rural

OHIO – Its that time of year when people are heading to the pumpkin patch to grab round orange globes and gourds. When you get home the decoration looks fabulous in front of your home but soon those fruits start to rot before the season end and make for a mess.


The best way to preserve your pumpkins and gourds is to bleach them! But how is that environmentally friendly you ask? Bleach breaks down in the sun to basically table salt and water in the sun. The chemical chlorine bleach is a mixture of water and sodium hypochlorite – a salt. According to Facts About Bleach, it does not harm the environment or contaminates groundwater. It begins and ends as salt water in a fully sustainable cycle. The bleach is used to kill all the mold that is unseen on the pumpkin when you purchase it.



Even if that neighborhood squirrel or animal takes a bite out of your pumpkins it will just be a little saltier and wont harm them. So this is how best to do it.

Mix Three teaspoons of bleach to three gallons of water. Fill a spray bottle with the mixture and after carving you spray inside your pumpkin with the diluted bleach solution or put the pumpkin into the bucket and submerge overnight. A dab of vegetable oil after the cure will make it bright and beautiful. Over time another spray of bleach and treatment of oil will be necessary for longevity.

Pumpkins are great décor for the fall season, and afterwards dont forget to find a place to put your pumpkin so fall critters getting ready for winter can use them as a food source.