From Spotlight: Treat Your Home to a Trick-Free Halloween

The Halloween Nightmare That Only a Plumber Can Save You From

Carving pumpkins is fun — unless you do this one dumb thing.

Pumpkin pulp in a kitchen sink
Image: Sanapadh/Andr Dogbey /EyeEm/Getty

if you toss the pulp, seeds, and other guts you’re scraping out of pumpkins for Halloween into your garbage disposal, expect some creepy noises, and a plumber bill. Toss them in the trash or the compost pile instead.

In a press release, Roto-Rooter warns homeowners about the dangers of pumpkin pulp, saying its plumbers “remove gobs of it from clogged drains” during the Halloween season.

 

Carving Pumpkins

“Plumbers know that frantic homeowners will soon be complaining about pulp-clogged garbage disposals and stopped-up kitchen sink drains leading up to Halloween,” says Larry Rothman, Roto-Rooter’s plumbing director.

"It's stringy and sticky, and when it dries and hardens it’ll choke off drainpipes and garbage disposals, creating all sorts of havoc."

Evidently, people flush pumpkin guts down the toilet, too, Rothman says. "The toilet is not a better option,” he says. “It just means the clog forms a little further down the pipe."

Your best bet: Throw pulp in the compost pile or let your old pumpkin sprout some vines in your flower or vegetable bed; you might have pumpkins this time next year.

Related: How to Clean Up After Thanksgiving in Half the Time

Real Estate Expert Dona Dezube
Dona DeZube

Dona DeZube has been writing about real estate for more than two decades. She lives in a suburban Baltimore Midcentury modest home on a 3-acre lot shared with possums, raccoons, foxes, a herd of deer, and her blue-tick hound.