The Great Pumpkin
Competitive vegetable growers are closing in on an elusive goal—the one ton squash
- By Brendan Borrell
- Photographs by Greg Ruffing
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
In 2000, instead of driving his pumpkin to a weigh-off in New York State and netting a $10,000 bonus, he decided to stay in Ohio, where the prize money was only $1,500. “Not to be able to share it with all my friends would have been a crying shame,” he says.
On a rainy July day, Werner and Parks donned their monogrammed club shirts and crisscrossed the Ohio Valley with other club members on the annual patch tour. The two had seen a lot during their time with the club, but nothing prepared them for Jerry Snyder’s property in Bessemer, Pennsylvania. Snyder, a retired schoolteacher, sometimes devoted 12 hours a day to a garden that looked like a Hollywood set: Jurassic Park meets Little Shop of Horrors. Waxy green cabbage heads the diameter of basketballs ran along the edge of a patch filled with a dozen outsize onions poking out of the soil. Competition tomatoes the size of grapefruits, still green, dangled from vines near a bloated, pale orange pumpkin. Two six-foot-long gourds hung from a red arch. “Look at those petunias on the hillside there,” Parks said, enumerating the botanical riches from under an umbrella, “and those are raspberries and blackberries down there....He’s got the rhubarb up there...castor beans....This is a labor of love.”
Near a tent set up for tour members, Snyder was surrounded by two dozen growers in awe of his green thumb. “Is that leaf mulch one or two years old?” a club person asked.
“That’s last year’s, but I turn it four times,” he replied. The crowd gasped and murmured.
“You spray all your fertilizer on?” another asked. “You don’t run it through a drip line?”
“Nope. I spray it all.”
“What’s horticultural oil?”
“Baking soda and Joy dishwashing soap.”
“Is that safe to eat on zucchini?”
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Comments (6)
Who discovered the pumpkin plant
Posted by Krisla Wagner on January 17,2013 | 10:29 AM
wow that is alot of importet stuff but it was so were it
Posted by hannah on October 11,2012 | 03:10 PM
The mention of Thoreau in this article reminded me of a scene in Little Men by Louisa May Alcott, in which young men carve a giant pumpkin into a carriage to carry a small girl. The Alcott family knew Thoreau; in fact there's a Thoreau-inspired character in many of Miss Alcott's books. I wonder if this scene was prompted by Thoreau's great pumpkins?
Posted by Carol Scott on October 28,2011 | 09:26 PM
How does one remove the hulls from the pumpkin seeds?
Posted by diane larson on October 26,2011 | 05:39 PM
In the Land of The Giants...
Happy Holloween 2011
Posted by Lucien Alexandre Marion on October 12,2011 | 09:57 AM
As I recall the "smaller" great pumpkins when this growing contest began, I am amazed at the increase in weight and size. When people set their minds to it it is amazing what can be accomplished. This is a good example.
Not only that, but in Utah this practice went from the hundred weights to some 1,700 pounds this year. What a sight! Now I see they are moving into growing wipe out watermellons---right on. If we are lucky cantalope may be next.
Posted by B Sonneman on October 11,2011 | 05:05 PM