AZGPG Weigh Off Header 2015

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Have Scale - Will Travel

Growing a giant pumpkin requires an awful lot of work and those efforts need to be rewarded.  However, if you live in Arizona, or anywhere in the Southwest Deserts, there aren't many weigh-offs for growers to attend.   There are a number of weigh-offs in Colorado during September and October. Or,  you can truck your pumpkins over to Northern California.  However, many of us start and end our seasons differently than people in the traditional pumpkin-belt.
Baker 461.5 on AZGPG's floor scale

The AZGPG wants to ensure that all growers have a chance to get their pumpkins, squashes, watermelons, or other giant vegetables onto a certified scale.  Often, the fruit doesn't make the scale because there isn't a scale readily available to use.  We've fixed that.  The AZGPG now owns it's own certified scale and we're willing to drive it to wherever to ensure your pumpkin gets properly weighed.

To make it even more fun, the AZGPG has established a Virtual Weigh-Off so that your pumpkins can earn a ribbon.  If you have more than one entry per category, then we will weigh them all.  However, you can only have one entry earn a ribbon; the rest will be considered "Exhibition" fruit or vegetables.

Entry forms can be found on the AZGPG webpage, or contact them at INFO at AZGPG.COM for an entry form.

The Virtual Weigh-Off will end on October 31.  Ribbons will be awarded for First, Second, and Third Place.  Personal Best ribbons will be awarded to those earning the ribbon.  Any state records (Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada) will receive a separate ribbon for their accomplishment.

Dean Baker entered his last giant pumpkin in the Virtual Weigh-Off.  The fruit weighed 461.5 pounds when it hit the scale on June 10 at Harper's Landscape & Garden Centre.

We're looking forward to seeing everyone else's pumpkins during this summer.  We're always up for a road trip.

Sunday, June 7, 2015

It's a Science Project

The bar has been raised!

It's time to celebrate.  We've set a new record for growing giant pumpkins.

Dean celebrates new Arizona record
We all have learned a lot during the first five months of 2015. The AZGPG, as a group, set as its 2015 goals to 1) Beat the existing Arizona State record for growing giant pumpkins, and 2) Break the 500-pound plateau with our pumpkins.

So far, we have successfully grown two pumpkins that weighed-in larger than the long-held Arizona record; and we grew a third pumpkin that was within four pounds of the old record. We have accomplished our most important goal for 2015. We beat the existing record. As the former record holder, Ben Buchsieb, said at the AZGPG Spring Harvest Festival, "It's time for somebody to break that record."

I think setting the new record is far more important than weighing-in at over 500 pounds. That being said, there are still seven months left in 2015 to accomplish the second goal -- and I know we have three more pumpkins still in the ground to be weighed over the next few months.

Last fall I suggested the growing season for Arizona, and the Southwest Desert, should be moved all the way into January. It was an idea without any proof to back it up; but our results seem to show we have the right idea. It just seems logical that Arizona growers need to consider the conditions other parts of the country enjoy during their season.

Weather is a major consideration for Southwestern growers when they're cultivating giant pumpkins. Central Arizona's temperatures, during January through May, are similar to the weather found in traditional pumpkin-belt states during May to September. That being true, then we should start our seeds in December (They usually start their seeds in April).

I recognize there is limited commercial (or consumer) interest in growing pumpkins for Memorial Day. Still, if we believe that size is everything, then we must change our thinking and plant our pumpkins as soon after New Year's Day as possible.

The Phoenix area typically has its last frost day at the end of February. In order to get a full 120-150 days for the giant pumpkin, we need to start before the accepted start dates for our region. This means that we must find a way to keep the plants warm early in the season - just like everybody else must do in the traditional pumpkin corridor.

I do believe our climate helps us later in the growth cycle because our warm weather will carry our plants to the finish line. Our challenge, at the end of the season, is to keep our plants cool (shade cloth and misters). The Northern pumpkin states start worrying in September because their temperatures drop and the cold slows their pumpkin growth (Sort of like what we see in late May - and especially in June).

We control the things we can. We know it starts with good seed genetics and properly amended soil. We also pay attention to the weather and take steps to modify it when necessary. Too much, or not enough, sun, shade, wind, fertilizer, water, etcetera can derail our season. It's our experimenting with all these variables that brings the element of luck into the growing season. If something bad happens to our plants, then we have to remind ourselves that this is a "hobby" and not our livelihood.

AZGPG Spring Harvest Festival entries
Many of the growing techniques, that we take for granted, were developed by championship growers in the 1980's and have been adopted by successful grower since. As a result, record weights continue to be obtained, each year, by part-time gardeners/growers who work hard to grow a plant that is essentially a static display. I prefer to think of it as a science project. We need to be willing to try new techniques, which will help us discover ways to improve our chances for a giant plant.

Ben Bushieb grew his 469-pound pumpkin in 2007. Scott Culp grew a 454 pounder in 2002. We have already established a new Arizona record (486 pounds) and added three pumpkins over 460 pounds to Arizona's top giant pumpkin list in 2015.

The Arizona Giant Pumpkin Growers want to be a resource for giant pumpkin growers, and growers of other giant vegetables. We believe there is a group of gardeners/growers ready to take the next step and grow BIG pumpkins, and giant vegetables, in Arizona and the Southwest Deserts. We believe by creating a resource for new growers - as well as experienced growers - that collectively we will all be more successful. The AZGPG mission is to provide a means of sharing information, which can benefit all gardeners/growers interested in our hobby.

We're probably not ready to be growing 1,000, or 1,500-pound pumpkins quite yet. But I do believe we can clear 500 pounds within the next year. The AZGPG declared 2015 as "Operation 501". We beat the old record. Now we need to raise the bar - again; and grow them big.

The AZGPG will continue to support the efforts of all giant pumpkin and vegetable growers; and will celebrate all of their successes. Be it a state record or a Personal Best.

Friday, June 5, 2015

Volunteers Make the Festival a Success

Taking the 465 Smith out of the patch
Moving 486 Baker from the scale
The weigh-off couldn't have happened if there weren't volunteers to move the pumpkins (via tarps) from the pallets to the scale - then back to the pallets. We're so thankful for all those who pitched in to help with the weigh-off.

The volunteers put in three hours on Friday moving four pumpkins from their patches to the staging area at Harper's Landscape & Garden Centre.  No one in attendance had ever moved a giant pumpkin before, so there was a lot of learning going as as we went.  Fortunately, the chore became easier with time ... however, that was offset by the weights of the pumpkins.  Why we decided to carry the heaviest pumpkins out last -- well, I don't know.  But we were relieved when everything was in place.

Saturday morning was supposed to be about coffee, donuts, and watching giant pumpkins being weighed.  We had planned to use a tractor with a pumpkin ring and harness.  However, we found out we needed to practice with the harness in order to make it work for us.  As a result, we once again asked for volunteer to help us move the pumpkins -- again -- with a tarp.  We got lucky and people stepped up to help.

We're so thankful to all the guys who stepped up and helped on both Friday and Saturday.  Growing giant pumpkins is fun to do and to watch.  Moving giant pumpkins is a problem unless you have some help.  The volunteers made the ASGPG Spring Harvest Festival a success.

Thanks to the Festival Judges

Bart Toftness, Wendy Woodward, Scott Culp

Getting the official measurements for the Festival entries
Thank you to Bart Toftness and AZGPG members, Scott Culp and Wendy Woodward, for serving as the judges at the AZGPG Spring Harvest Festival. They did a great job of ensuring the event went off without a hitch.

The mission of the AZGPG is to help growers develop friendships, and create goodwill, through our shared hobby of growing giant pumpkins, and vegetables, in the Southwest Deserts.

An important part of the mission is ensuring that an even playing field is created for all entries, and that the events be fun for all contestants and community members.

Judging the event is both a responsibility and a chance to learn more about the characteristics of a giant pumpkin.

Better Late Than Never

Dean Baker awards Ben Buchsieb the Arizona State Record ribbon for his 2007 pumpkin weighing 469 pounds.
The AZGPG may be a young organization, but Arizona does have some history growing giant pumpkins. Ben Buchsieb (469 pounds in 2007) was awarded an Arizona State Record and Personal Best ribbon for his pumpkin. His record stood for 8 years before it was broken at this year's Festival.

Ben Buchsieb started his pumpkin seed on January 18, 2007 and cared for it until it weighed-in at 469 pounds on June 2.  He grew the pumpkin in his backyard when he lived in Ahwatukee.  He sought to overcome the same problems current growers are having -- but did so without a support organization like AZGPG to help.  He did receive some assistance from growers via BigPumpkin.com

His diary is used by current growers to help them understand how to grow bigger pumpkins in the Southwest Desert.

His efforts predated the AZGPG, but they are remembered as an important part of the group's legacy.

Culp's Personal Best -- 454 Culp 2002

Scott Culp received a Personal Best ribbon for his 454 pound pumpkin in 2002.

The Fat Boys Were Thirsty

Wow!  Look how much they consumed in 14 hours.  I should have stuck the vines deeper in the bottles.
All entries arrived at the weigh-off site at about 6 pm the night before the event. All pumpkins had gallon water bottles attached to their vines. When we arrived on Saturday morning (at about 7:30 am) the pumpkins had inhaled about one gallon of water each. It probably would have been more, but they stopped when the vines couldn't reach the water in the bottom of the bottles.

Temperatures in Scottsdale were 105 on Friday and 107 on Saturday.  Humidity was between 5 to 7 percent.

Thanks to Jay Harper and Harper's Landscape & Gardening Centre

Thanks to Jay Harper (right), owner of Harper's Landscape & Garden Centre, for sponsoring the AZGPG Spring Harvest Festival. Jay is talking with (from left) Scott Culp, Dave Smith, and Dean Baker about the 486 Baker pumpkin as it arrived the night before the weigh-off.

A "NEW" Record

486 Baker 2015
The NEW Arizona State record for growing giant pumpkins is the 486 Baker 2015 (1513 Sherwood '14 x 1622 Young '09). Dean's pumpkin beat the old record by 17 pounds.

The plant was germinated on December 24, then transplanted into the garden on January 5.  The early date necessiated the use of heating boxes and candles to keep it warm during the cold January weather.  The plant continued to grow through February and developed female flowers by the end of the month.  The winning fruit was the second pumpkin on the main vine.  The 5-lobe flower was pollinated on March 15.
It grew slowly until the middle of April when sufficient sun and air allowed the plant to prosper.  Approximately 75 percent of the plants growth occurred during the last 40 days on the vine.

More than 50 people attended the AZGPG Spring Harvest Festival to witness the giants being weighed.

"I was ** this ** close

465 Smith 2015
Dave placed second at the AZGPG Spring Harvest Festival with his 465 Smith 2015 (1622 Young '09 x selfed.)

The 1622 Young has a strong history and the Arizona growers wanted to ensure its genetics were included in future plants grown in the Southwest Desert.  The male flowers from the 1622 were used to pollinate both of Dean Baker's plants -- to include the new state record plant.

Dave was able to save over 300 seeds to be used by AZGPG growers, and growers from other parts of the country, and ensures the lineage continues.

Casper - The White Pumpkin

483 Baker 2015
Dean Baker brought "Casper",  his white pumpkin, to the weigh-off. Many thought it would be the heaviest pumpkin at the show. The 483 Baker 2015 (1666 Holland '13 x 1622 Young '09) was larger than the old Arizona record, but was three pounds lighter than the winning pumpkin.  The odd-shaped pumpkin made it hard to estimate its actual weight.

Dean was pleased he could share the day with his grandchildren.  He says they are the real reason he grows giant pumpkins.  "It's the only thing I do that might impress them."

Prettiest Pumpkin

361 Smith 2015
Dave Smith has always focused on growing "orange" pumpkins.  He has purposely collected seeds from growers that produce big, round, orange fruit.  This year it paid off as Dave was able to show his 361 Smith 2015 (923 Gerhardt '09 x Selfed) at the AZGPG Spring Harvest Festival.  The judges voted unanimously that the 361 beauty was the prettiest pumpkin to be shown.

New Giant Pumpkin Record in Arizona

Arizona has a new giant pumpkin record.  The eight-year-old record was broken at the AZGPG Spring Harvest Festival held on Saturday, May 30, at Harper's Landscape & Gardening Centre in Scottsdale.  Dean Baker's 486 pound pumpkin weighed in 17 pounds heavier than the former state record.

New Arizona Record
Dean grew his pumpkin on his garden plot at the northeast corner of the Scottsdale Community College campus.  As a member of the Scottsdale Community Garden Club, Dean gardens on a small portion of the seven acres SCC provides to local gardeners.

Giant pumpkin growing is a hobby enjoyed internationally by growers interested in pushing the size limits of various fruits and vegetables.  Rules regarding the various plants have been established by both North American and European gardening groups.  Giant pumpkins are judged solely on weight.  The more the better.  Judges assess the wholeness of the fruit before it is weighed.  The pumpkin must not have any major rotted spots or holes that go through to the cavity of the plant.

Giant pumpkins generally take 120-150 days to mature.  They produce both male and female flowers and are naturally pollinated by bees.  For competitive pumpkins the plants are most often hand-pollinated by the grower to ensure the genetic traits of the pumpkin.  Pumpkins can be orange, yellow, green, white or any combination of colors.  However, it the plant is 100-percent green, blue, or grey, then it is considered a squash for competition.

Four entries were made to this year's Festival.  Two pumpkins were weighed for prizes and two other pumpkins were weighed for exhibition.  Dave Smith's entry of a 465 pound pumpkin placed second in the competition.  Dave also entered a 361 pound pumpkin which was judged as the prettiest pumpkin in the competition.  Dean also brought a second pumpkin to the competition which weighed 483 pounds.

The event was viewed by more than 50 people who came to Harper's Landscape & Garden Centre to pick up supplies for their weekend project - and stayed to see the giant fruits hit the scale.  Harper's has served the Scottsdale and East Valley community for three generations.  The Harper's sponsored the Spring Harvest Festival as part of it's ongoing commitment to give back to the community that has supported the family for three generations.

The Arizona Giant Pumpkin Growers (AZGPG) is an association of giant pumpkin, and giant vegetable, growers living in the Southwest Deserts.  The AZGPG provides information, and support, to growers attempting to produce competitive plants in our harsh desert environment.

The weigh-off was sanctioned as an international weigh-off site by Team-Pumpkin, which is made up of hobbiest interested in providing assistance to growers nationally and internationally.