Posted by: Sandy Steinman | June 13, 2025

A trip to the farm where loofahs grow on vines 

Popular Science reported

Think this natural sponge comes from the ocean? Think again.

If you’ve spent most of your life under the impression that loofahs are some type of sea sponge and that these scratchy natural scrubbers are the last thing you’d want to use on your body on a daily basis, you’re not alone. But in fact, the Luffa Aegyptiaca (often known as loofah in the U.S.) is the taxonomic name of a species of gourd that grows on land, and it’s a genetic descendant of the wild cucumber. What’s more, if it’s locally grown with minimal processing, it’s plenty soft enough for not just your skin, but plenty of other applications, too.

Read more at  A trip to the farm where loofahs grow on vines | Popular Science


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