Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Time to change

No, I'm NOT giving up growing. Far from it. I hope next year to put forth my best effort ever.

If you've known me for a while, you know that I can't stay in one place very long with this giant pumpkin blog. Over the past year, I've become somewhat of a Facebook junkie, and I also see better things happening over at bigpumpkins.com. Or at least, that site is REALLY stable.

So, because I already put more pictures up on FB, I'm going to discontinue this blog at this location and move my efforts to Facebook and bigpumpkins.com. I will probably do a regular "Grower Diary" on bigpumpkins.com and will also put updates on Facebook. Doing a diary on BP.com gets me MUCH more visibility to giant pumpkin growers across the world, while Facebook brings in a much more diverse audience.

Also on Facebook, I have created a page called "Southeast Idaho Giant Pumpkin Growers." You can go to FB and just do a search. If you like it, please join. This gives you the instant ability to send an email to everyone on the page, share photos with the group, stay involved in what's going on, etc.

I've found FB to be really "worthwhile"... it is so cool to catch up with old friends there. Who knows, maybe in a year from now FB will collapse under it's own weight, or maybe it will be passed by another hot thing... but for now it's the place to go.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Fruit cut

OK, finally an update.

I should (or maybe shouldn't) mention the Farmer's Market weighoff. Unfortunately, it was a non-event. On several levels. Oh well.

I cut the 423 orange fair fruit and the 617 yesterday. Each was thick and had lots of seeds. I'm saving all of the 423 seeds, even though they are "open" pollinations. A lot of people have asked about them, and they are perfect for beginning growers.

Now, really is busy time. I need to do everything possible to add organic matter. Last year I was really held back by my soil. Next year I'm returning to the "good side" of the garden, and I want to add everything possible to it. I'm starting in on collecting Starbucks coffee waste.

Friday, October 16, 2009

I'm alive

Just a note to mention that I'm still alive. The 998 is alive as well. It lives under several blankets and a tarp over that. It's been warm lately, and I really should let it breathe. Most days I never make it outside.

One week from tomorrow is that final weighoff. I wonder if there is a prize? I wonder if anyone else will show up? I really hope so... This could become another weighoff to shoot for.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Cold and snow

It has snowed most of the day here. Not much is sticking, but it is very wet.

As for seeds, I have already had some inquiries about the very orange 423. On the good side, it is in fact VERY orange, it went heavy for it's size, and it has a rib-structure which I think could support a much heavier fruit. Get this one on a healthy plant, 15 feet out, and it would be real nice. On the downside, it was an open pollination. In fact, I was gone the day that it opened. I wish there was a way to determine a seed's color potential before committing to it.

To anyone interested in the 423 or the 617, they will be available. Likely I won't cut the fruit until around Halloween, unless it looks like we might go into an early deep-freeze. Freezing doesn't hurt the seed, but I'd rather not spend hours picking seeds out of COLD pumpkin flesh, lol.

The 998 is probably around 350 to 400 (guessing), but if it goes like the other two went, it could go into the 400's. I hope I can keep it healthy over the next few days, while the overnight temps dip down into the 20's.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Pocatello Farmer's Market Weighoff

Believe it or not, there is one more weighoff for me this year. The Pocatello Farmer's Market is hosting a weighoff on Oct. 24th. That's right, right about when AG's are already a block of ice around here. That's a whole three weeks from this coming Saturday. It's quite likely that we'll have temperatures in the TEENS between now and then. Atlantic Giants have a very high water content. At those temperatures, the flesh of the fruit will actually freeze.

This could be an interesting experiment, to see if I can keep it going with lots of blankets and tarps. I might just trim it down to nothing but a main vine and the fruit. Essentially that is all that is left now anyway.

So, I'm hanging on with a 400 pounder (hopefully) on the 998 Bowles. It was supposed to be orange, but it's white/pink. I do appreciate the idea from the Pocatello Farmer's Market... I just wish it could be two or three weeks earlier.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Group photo


Most of the growers that showed fruit at Brian's weighoff!

Betty's big orange one


Congratulations to Betty Urquidi, who really stepped up this year and grew this amazingly orange fruit. 507 pounds!

Brian's Weighoff





Well, I'm so slow to update this blog, I didn't even mention that I won Brian Christensen's weighoff in Rexburg this past Saturday! My pumpkin on the 1436 Nesbitt went heavy and ended up 617.5! It was taping around 530 or 550, so a finish like that always puts a good end on the season!

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Main vine cut down to size

On the 1436, I've been worried about a potential rib split. I've been watching it a few days and it has not become worse, but we had a lot of rain yesterday. It's still cold now, but could warm up and with some warm sunshine and a saturated plant, those ribs could swell up and that would be it.

So, I cut the main. Not right at the fruit, but from the fruit to the base, I cut the vine so that there is only about two feet of vine in the ground before the fruit. There is also the vine after the fruit. Hopefully this will stop any major infusions of juice into the fruit, but keep it fresh.

Monday, September 14, 2009

My blog is lame.

OK, back for another installment in the world's lamest blog. I think next year I might switch this again and use a combination of Facebook and the blogging features on bigpumpkins.com. We shall see. Can we get an Idaho Giant Pumpkin Facebook thing going?

In the meantime, I did happen to win the fair. 423 pounds. There were some other "large" pumpkins there... some I could tell were not Atlantic Giant and one that was about 100 pounds, I'm not sure. But I really like that someone else sent some large fruit to the fair. To anyone in our area, plant some ATLANTIC GIANT seeds next spring and bring them to the fair!

At the fair I was talking to Sharon, and promised that next year eastern Idaho is going to break their record and provide 10 giants for the fair. I believe the record is nine. So, are we up for it?

The fruit on the 1436 is somewhere between 500 and 550. It's also very close to having a rib split. This one might be worth top prize at the weighoff, but if it splits it's worth nothing but bragging rights. I need to look at it closely tonight, and maybe consider cutting it from the vine. I hate to do that, but that split could happen. It might have already happened, because I didn't look at it yesterday, and right now the rain is coming down.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Heading to the fair tonight...

In fact, within two hours. Rumor has it that I may have the only entry this year. I hope not.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Coming to a fair near you!


If you are near Blackfoot, Idaho, that is.

It looks impressive, but it doesn't measure impressively. On the 1392 Bresnick. I think it would be double size if it were 15 feet out and in good soil.

I didn't do nearly enough soil prep in the off season, and it shows. I can really begin to see the relationship here. Back when I got a few truckloads of manure, and built up my soil, my weights, while small, rose. This year has been a disaster. I need to get back to basics, and also try some completely new things.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Next year, raised beds

Next year, I will do some raised beds. Formal raised beds, constructed from lumber. More details later.

A very cool late-summer

Heading for a low in the low-40's tonight. We've had several of these already and will have a few more this week. All in all, it's not a record breaking year. I just measured my largest, it's at a whopping 350 pounds now. If I'm lucky, it could get to 500. One thing it has going for it is a great shape and no internal cracks, just like the 779 from last year. So I suppose it could weigh heavy like last year?

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Summer was one month

This year we really didn't hit full-time summer weather until just after the 4th of July. Now, it's sort of like mid-September out there. Cool, with drizzly rain. Overnight temps below 50. This is not going to be a record-setting year.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Zzzzz...

OK, well my blog is about as boring as this season is. I have one decent pumpkin, and two other slow growing ones. It will take quite a turn of events for me to get to a personal best this year. I'd like to top the 779 and get into the 800's, but, it's a long shot.

Here is the 1436. It appears to be my only hope.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Down to three...

Well, the 779 fruit aborted. On this one, the main vine is simply running out of energy, much like the 964 did. I have no explanation for it. And on the 964, that "peanut" isn't growing. This puts me down to three fruits that have any chance at being competitive. If I get a split or two, well...

Friday, July 24, 2009

Everything is reversed

Well, here we go. This is just such a "good and bad" year.

Two months ago, if you had told me that the 1436 and the 1392 would be the kings of the patch, I would have not thought it possible.

1436 - Looking awesome. The fruit is growing nicely, and has a perfect shape.

1392 - Also looking great. The fruit is doing well, even though the plant doesn't seem like much.

998 - The double-vining freak plant. The fruit is coming on. It should be round and orange.

Now, for the two that I THOUGHT would do well:

964 - The fruit is PEANUT shaped!! Ugh. I might need to go with a side vine fruit. I'll post a picture, but this shape doesn't bode well for it's long-term prospects. My 964 plant last year produced a 100% perfect fruit with big walls and no cracks. This one, well I mentioned that the vine kind of died off near the fruit... looks like the fruit is bad as well.

779 - Has a fruit pollinated at a good spot, but it just isn't growing much. There is still time for it to kick into gear, but so far I'm disappointed. Maybe this will become the Pocatello Farmer's Market weighoff fruit. ;-)

The 1232 is still around, and should produce some nice carvers.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Update

Here is a general update. Maybe I'll post pictures later today.


998 - The plant is a genetic freak, with lots of vines going double, and vines going everywhere. I try to keep it pruned but it's hard to know what is what. I have a pollination at about 12 feet, on a vine that I turned into a "secondary main". It's too soon to know if this one will take, but if it doesn't just about any other fruit on the plant might do just as well.

964 - Was my best plant, but the leaves on the main just past the 10 foot mark seemed weak, would wilt every day, then finally the vine just DIED at the 13 foot mark! I don't know why. Some of the leaves there look my friend Brian Christensen's leaves, but certainly not as severe. I have a fruit there at 12.5 feet, and it will stay. Nearly all of the rest of the plant has had vines terminated already. There are a few still growing. But if the fruit takes, then it will grow at the end of the main. It has a good plant to drive it. For the moment I'm not taking off any other females until I know that this one on the main will stay.

779 - Finally had a main vine fruit pollinate yesterday. This one took forever to open. I sure hope it takes. Once I get to 12 feet, my vines really slow down.

1232 - Will be a wild plant to grow small giant pumpkins.

1392 - Plant looks a little weak, but it has my oldest main vine fruit at about 9.5 feet, and another one at around 11. It's doing OK.

1436 - This could become my best plant, depending on what the 964 does. It's a nice, straight plant that is easy to train. I have two pollinations on the main, similar to the 1392.

Looks like I might have a another weighoff to look at this year. The Pocatello Farmer's Market is hosting a weighoff, the week before Halloween. Not sure if I can keep a fruit going that long, but if so I might as well go down there and promote the sport. This weighoff appears to be really low-key. I suspect that over half of the entries will be field pumpkins. But maybe I can meet someone who is wanting to get involved, here in Pocatello. Or, maybe I'll be the only one there, with this weather we've had!

Sunday, July 5, 2009

A siamese female...


Strange things are all around us!

And the storm clouds gather...


This image is a prime example of how this summer has gone. Nearly every day there is some of this.

Last night we got pounded again. I've never seen so much rain in 30 minutes, at least in this part of the world.

As for the plants, despite all the water they look "wilty", probably because the soil is so compacted the roots are smothered.

Pollinations - 1392, July 3rd, open; 1436 July 4th, x964; 964 July 5th, x779;

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Update

I'm surviving here. The plants have responded to some nice weather and some good feedings. Although I'm never where I'd like to be, considering the weather I'm glad to have what I have.

One thing to note, the growth in the patch is not linear. That is, right now they are taking off. A week ago, they were not.

Pictured here is the 779 Warren. This is going to be a good seed. I already know that this one will be in my patch next year. It's at 10 feet right now.



The 964 is at 11.5 feet. The 1436 is around 9, and the 1392 is at about 8. The 1392 has taken a lot of hail damage. As for the 998, it's doing a little better but it's an odd plant due to it's propensity to throw double vines. On that one I'll probably set a few fruit wherever and keep the best one.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

What a difference a day makes

I was so positive yesterday. Things have made a turn for the worse.

We got another downpour today, along with hail. Lots more leaves have been ripped up and shredded. The 1392 is particularly bad. I don't see an intact leaf on the plant.

My soil is so wet, I sink in 4 inches if I take a step on it.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Catching up...

Here is where we stand. Not bad, considering the lack of warmth we've had!

998 Bowles - This one started out "gangbusters". Then the main vine went double, twice. I stopped the main and have anointed a secondary to become a new main. But it has taken forever to develop. One of the side vines is also a massive double vine. Many of the vines simply grow straight up into the air... it's a crazy plant and I'm not sure what I'll get from it.

964 Wolf - Awesome in every way, except that it has a nice split in the main vine. I think it's manageable, if I can keep it from getting worse. The main is out beyond 10 feet right now, I think.



779 Warren - Also very good. Almost as long as the 964, (from whence it came). It has a female at about 9 feet which should open in about 5 days. But that one is early. I should have a nice set at 12 or 13 feet, at the proper time!



1392 Bresnick - Odd looking plant, hairy, weird leaves, but doing OK. A little smaller than the first three I mentioned.

1436 Nesbitt - Looking fine. About the same size as the 1392. This was Elise's plant, but she seemed to have lost interest this year when she found out that the fair wasn't hosting a big money prize. So far I've done all the work, and so it becomes my plant. Between this one and the 998, likely one of these will need to be the fair fruit, because I can't get the others out until one of these comes out of the patch.

1232 Bailey - Out of the running. The plant has always been small, and then a section of the main got some sort of rot or it just didn't develop. It came out 90 degrees out of phase, and the main is now snapped... The plant might stay around simply because there is no other use for the space.

These leaves.....



I wish I could figure out what's "eating" these leaves. They first appear as tears in the leaf. And then they progress.

Click on the images to get a high resolution version.

I did use neem about one month ago, and then I used it again today.

My leaves always look like this, every year. I'd like to know what causes it!

Still hasn't changed

I haven't needed to water anything for three weeks!

We're in the wettest month ever for Pocatello, and it's only the 20th of June!

Thursday, June 11, 2009

When will this weather change!?

It's been cool and rainy since May31st!

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

998 Surgery

I performed surgery on the 998 Bowles, to stop a double vine.

First of all, if you are seeing this via Facebook, it's because I setup my blog to send the blog posts to Facebook as notes. But, on FB you aren't seeing the pictures. If you would like to see the pictures, visit me at:

http://cliffsgiantpumpkin.blogspot.com/

OK, well the idea is to stop the double-vine completely and then train a secondary to take over. You can see how this vine is a trouble spot. It's sticking straight up and probably won't come down.

The offending main vine:



With the amount of "stuff" pruned away, hopefully that will send a lot of energy to a secondary. The secondary I have picked out is two nodes up from the double-bundle of pumpkin parts.

Before:



After:

998 double-vining

Well, I see now why the 998 has such a monster vine. It's double-vining again. It had done this early on, then it split and I terminated one. Now it's double vining again. Not to panic... I'll just have to look at it and decide how to best manage it. Pics are forthcoming, I hope. And, it does look like it's spliting again, and if so I'll just terminate one.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Comeback

These plants never cease to amaze me. On Friday I was blasted by wind. The plants were a mess. I pruned out quite a few twisted vines and a lot of broken leaves. By Sunday evening, the plants are looking great again. To the untrained eye, it would appear that nothing happened! They just fill in the empty spots and look great! I should always remember that top growers take out 1/3 to 1/2 of their secondaries anyway, and it should be good for the plant.

I'd say that I'm nearing 7 feet on the mains of the 998 and 964. That's pretty good considering that I've been with cool temperatures over the past week. Today is the first day that we're starting to see some sun in quite some time. This rainy pattern is supposed to continue through this week, but I'm hoping for some lucky breaks of sun.

The 998 is a monster. I've never had such a vigorous plant. The main vine is huge for this stage.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Is this the end?

I'm not talking about the end of my giant pumpkins.

When we have to turn our central heating on, in June? When we get more rain in one week than we usually get in a year? I've had the sprinklers off for a week now. That has never happened before. The sun is at a low ebb, but it's out of character, out of it's normal cycle.

On Friday the wind really did a number on my plants. I had to do a lot of pruning, but they will come back just fine. Right now I'm wondering when the weather will give them warm growing conditions.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Hmmm

OK, looks like I need fins, a snorkel, a mask...

Just add sun


About the only thing I could ask right now is to have some sun. We're in the second day of heavy overcast and rainy conditions.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Looking good

Welcome to June. My three best plants, the 998, 964, and 779 are as good as any that I've had at this stage. So far, we haven't had a weather event to do any damage to the plants, but perhaps it's only a matter of time.

One point that I need to write in bold letters, is that last year's 779 was grown at 13 feet out. It was probably the furthest out that I've had a fruit on a good plant. That is something to focus on... I'd like to get these fruits further out, even if it means that I'm into the second week of July to do it. But unless our weather turns cold, I have a good chance at getting some distance on some of these.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

779 Warren


I have five nice plants (one is Elise's) and one that is tattered and torn, but should recover soon.

The 779 Warren, 998 Bowles, and 964 Wolf are each doing awesome. The 1392 Bresnick and 1436 Nesbitt (Elise's) are also doing great. The 1232.5 Bailey, well, I made a mistake in where I put it in the HH, and it got battered and burned as the leaves were into the plastic.

Anyway, our weather is fantastic (at least for now!) so the plastic is down early this year. I'm going to love this as long as we continue to get great weather.

Here is the 779 Warren, which is a good example of the others:

Aerobic Compost Tea


Thursday, May 21, 2009

6 good plants

Well, here we are. Another hard freeze this morning. Sunspot activity is really low, and I think we're going to have a very cool summer. I have six really nice looking plants. I can't complain on that front. Hopefully this Saturday I'll be able to catch up with each of them, take pictures, etc.

Anyone out there who is reading this and has plants going, please let me know how you're doing!

Monday, May 18, 2009

998 Photo


Here is the 998, this morning. Those are milk jugs in the picture, so you can see how "tall" the plant is getting. In a few days this should fall, and then the plant starts crawling. Right now, my biggest challenge is to get each plant to fall in the right direction. Several of them seem to want to tip backward and go in the opposite direction from what I have planned for them.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Finally

I was about to say that the weather is finally getting nice, but we're supposed to go through another round of wind and cold starting this afternoon.

I only have 5 plants, plus one for Elise, this year. No backups made it out to the patch. It seems that any time I have a spare 5 minutes the wind is blowing or it's extremely cold. But each of the six plants out there is doing really well. The 998 Bowles is shaping up to be the Big Kahuna this year, and the 964 Wolf and 779 Warren are not far behind. My other two plants are the 1392 Bresnick, and the 1232.5 Bailey. Elise is growing the 1436 Nesbitt.

If I ever find a spare moment, I'll take some pictures.

Friday, May 8, 2009

25.9 degrees last night

Well, the headline says it all. I should be fine, all plants were covered.

Last night I was lying around, about 9pm, playing on my iPod. Tap, tap, scroll, and I can get an hour-by-hour report of the predicted temperatures. I saw that it was going to get down to 33. I know that for my particular spot, take what they say and subtract 7 or so degrees, and that's what you might get. It's easy to get complacent when you go about a week or so without freezing temperatures, to forget, to slip up just once and guess what? Your season is done. But the iPod really saved me last night!

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Time to swim

I think I might swim out to my patch tonight....................

The weather has been very bad for giant pumpkin growers.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Catching up

Well, I need to be more committed to updating this blog. It seems that I spend more time with Facebook these days.

Germination was pretty bad this year. I did get enough to fill every spot, but overall I'd say that the success rate was around 50%. Terrible! But luckily, other than the 1459 Sundstrom, each of the six spots has the plant that I had hoped would be the number one plant. Each site is planted, but each has only one plant at this time. No backups in the patch yet!

The 998 Bowles, 964 Wolf, 779 Warren, 1392 Bresnick, and 1232.5 Bailey are out there. Also, Elise's choice was a toss-up between the 1436 Nesbitt and 1362 Poirier. I put the Nesbitt out because it's easier to say than Poirier... but the Poirier could go out as soon as the HH is complete for that spot.

As for the 1459 Sundstrom, it came up but the seed leaves were mangled. It has a first true leaf, but so far I don't see any second true leaf developing. I will continue to monitor it.

So, about six days ago I started a 1071 Christensen and 583 Young. The Young is finally coming up today but the Christensen never moved. Then, later still I started a whole bunch of 720 and 779 Warrens, hopefully I'll get a few of them to show so I can put some backups out there. I don't know what I'm doing wrong, but I'm thinking I should blame it on the moon.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

2 out

My best two, the 998 Bowles and 964 Wolf are now out in the patch. Photos will come eventually.

Two others, the 779 Warren and 1459 Sundstrom are doing well and will probably go out tomorrow. Elise's 1362 Poirier will also probably go out. The last one, not decided yet, but I'm leaning toward the 1071 Christensen if it comes up.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

8 up

From the top left corner, the 998 Bowles. Next, going clockwise is the 1459 Sundstrom, just a little bit concerned, one of the seed leaves is connected "by a thread", and neither of them look good. They have that typical section of the leaf that sometimes fails to come to life. Next, the 964 Wolf. Solid. Next 1362 Poirier, really hasn't come above soil yet.

Continuing clockwise, now on the bottom row, the 779 Warren. Next is the 1392 Bresnick. That is followed by a 452 Wolf, and finally 1436 Nesbitt.

Me in my impatience have them out in the sun even though some of them are taking their own sweet time getting their feet set.

Seeds update

Here is an update. Last Thursday I started 12 seeds for 6 plants. The 998 Bowles was the first to come up, followed by the 964 Wolf, 1459 Sundstrom, and one of the 779 seeds. The 1459 has very poor seed leaves. Then the 1362 Poirier came up. I can see movement on the 1392 Bresnick, 425 Wolf, and 1436 Nesbitt.

All of the "first-string" seeds came up. The 1104 Brinkley, 1121 Bobier, and one of the 779 seeds have no movement. Today I started another 1104, 779, and also a 1071 Christensen and a 583 Young.

Friday, April 17, 2009

The season has started...

Started twelve seeds last night. More details coming...

I'm going to try to post my slides on growing the giants.

Monday, April 13, 2009

The daffodil meter


Every year I look to the emergence of daffodils as a meter as to how much "spring" weather we've had. In past years the daffodils are in bloom in mid-March, but this year the official day is April 13th.

Seed selections... backups?

Wow, here we are approaching seed starting season, and I still haven't given much thought to backups. I do have the starting lineup:

1. 779 Warren, backup is another double-planted 779.

2. 964 Wolf, backup not known yet

3. 1459 Sundstrom, backup with an 1121 Bobier.

4. 1392 Bresnick, backup not known yet.

5. 955 Brinkley, backup with a 720 Warren.

6. Elise's seed: Not completely decided yet. She says that she wants heavy, color not important! We could do another 779, but we will have one of those already, so maybe we'll try another.

Don't let anyone say that my membership in the New York grower's society is not for real! My patch is the official western outpost of the New York growers!

I'll need to get my seeds out and find some backups.

Holding pattern...

Normally this might be the week I would put seeds into pots. Say, start seeds on the 15th, or maybe a few days later. Then, 3 or 4 days for them to pop out of the soil, and another 3 or 4 days and they're ready to go out. But it just doesn't seem warm enough out there for this.

Today should be about 60, but then we're predicted to get colder, 35 degrees for a high on Wednesday!

When we get to Friday or Saturday of this week, I'll check the long range forecast. If that looks decent, I might start some seeds then.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Spring is here!

Well, a few days can make a big difference.

For yesterday and today at least, spring has arrived in south-east Idaho. We spent yesterday evening burning brush and cleaning up the garden in preparation for tilling. Hopefully today we will get the garden tilled. I'm at the mercy of my neighbors, as my tractor will need some work this summer. More on that later... I need to decide if I want to sell it to someone who wants to restore it, or if I can rebuild the engine. This decision would be easier to make if I had a shop space to keep it in.

So, today I hope to get a load of sand on my way home. This is a "sharp sand", which is coarse and is actually crushed rock. This should (hopefully) avoid clumping. It's definitely not beach sand. I'm only adding it to one or two plots.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

No change

Still getting snow and rain almost every day. Our reservoirs are full. I think we're going to have floods in the region, or at least very high, fast moving rivers. While I'm sitting here, I see that we have a fresh 2 or 3 inches of heavy wet stuff out there since I arrived at work.

I'm beginning to think that this could delay patch prep and the start of the season. Normally, I'd be planting in about three weeks from now. It just seems like an eternity, looking at all the saturated ground and cold temperatures. I have sprinkler lines to run, some sand and compost to bring in, not to mention a tractor that won't budge, and none of this can be done until it dries out. And, the forecast for the next week is much the same.

I sound like a broken record, but I'm absolutely in a holding pattern right now. Nothing can be done.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Still winter here...

Some notes...

In the past 7 days we've had three significant snow storms. High winds in-between each storm. I'm STILL at least 10 days from getting on the soil. I have sprinkler lines to run... and...

I still can't start my tractor. Quite puzzling, as I have good spark, and it still won't start even with starter fluid. It could be a head gasket. I don't know.

I'm giving a How to Grow seminar at Town and Country Gardens on April 9th at 7:00pm. If you are in the area and are reading this, please stop in! I will be giving a presentation, doing Q&A, and giving out free seeds.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Home, and nothing to do...

Well, I'm at one of my weeks off, in this slow economy. I would like to work outside, but...

Yesterday we had rain all day, and today we have 4 inches of thick new snow on the ground. This will melt quickly, but any hope I had of getting out on the tractor is pushed out another week or two.

Oh, and I still can't start my tractor. Timing set, points new, new plugs last year, new coil, battery good. It's really strange. I did pick up some Autolite 437's, I'm reading that the 216's that I have in there now is a "cool" plug, and I need the hot one. Also, a carb rebuild kit is in the mail. I guess this water will give me more time to figure it out.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Good Stuff

I picked up some old pallets this morning for free. These are great for constructing wind fences around the patch. I stand them on their side, and stake them up. As the plant grows, the fence can be moved. 

I think I have a real pumpkin grower in Elise. Of my five kids, she is the only one who has shown an interest in this hobby. I guess this is a "one of a city, two of a family" sort of pursuit. Anyway, this morning at breakfast I said, "So, for your plant this year, do you want one like my 779 from last year (pale, but heavy and solid) or do you want one that will be a nice pretty orange?" She (10 years old) looked me in the eye and said firmly, "Whatever gives me the best chance of beating ---- at the fair next year!" 

I think she's getting it...

Thursday, March 12, 2009

It's almost time

The weather has been extremely nice, but cold, the last two days. Bright sunshine, and you can tell that the sun is much higher in the sky. It's warmer when you stand in it. Even if this nice sunshine continues, it's going to be another week at least before I can get into the patch and do any meaningful pre-season prep. I need to run some sprinkler lines, get more loads of compost, maybe some sand, and then I finally need to get the tractor running. Wow.

For anyone in Pocatello, I'm doing a Giant Pumpkin seminar at Town and Country Gardens on April 9th.

I am SOOOOOO ready to ditch the coat, and the jacket, and put them somewhere where I can't find them, and be done with them until at least late October!

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Snow, snow, snow, snow, snow..................

"It's beginning to look a lot --- like --- Christmas!"

Sigh.

At least nobody will be whining about "not enough water" this year.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Winter isn't giving up...

Winter just won't go away here. Normally I'm pruning my trees at this time of the year.

One thing I should mention, these posts on my giant pumpkin blog are now being routed to Facebook. I'm not sure how that will work out. If it confuses people I just might kill the connection.

My neighbors now have windmills. One neighbor has one, and another has two. They are quite interesting. I don't mind them at all, and maybe someday I'll get one. Pictures are forthcoming.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Winter's Last Stand

Ha ha, we can only wish. But when this current deep freeze is over, the subsequent ones won't be as deep or as long. Yes, we'll get more snow and cold temps, but all this is coming to an end soon. Really.

All winter I've been pondering soil temperature. I live in an area where the temps really fall off at night. If the soil is shaded, well, the soil doesn't really get all that warm. We can have a 90-degree day, and then when the sun sets, it can get too cold to go barefoot on my back lawn.

One thing I've been thinking of trying is to get some large rocks (about the size of a fat loaf of bread) and use these to form a circle about five feet in diameter. This then gets backfilled with soil and other good stuff, to form a "raised bed" for a seedling. This whole spot gets covered with clear plastic in the early season. With the raised bed, and the rocks, and the plastic, and the addition of some dark colored "sharp sand", this might help raise soil temp.

Best laid plans... but this year I might actually have the time to pull it off.

Friday, January 30, 2009

779 germination

I decided to take a couple of 779 seeds and germinate them. They came up fine. Nice, green, sturdy seedlings. Not unexpected, but nice to see anyway. These seeds have a simple white coat, so I think they will come up readily without any sanding of the sides.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Seminar date moved...

The new date for the Giant Pumpkin seminar at Town and Country Gardens is now April 9th. More details to follow as we get closer to that date.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Some seeds to think about

I got my seeds from the NYSGPGA. Here is seedlist rev 1.1:

1. 779 Warren, with another 779 as a backup.
2. 964 Wolf. I do have yet another 964, so if one doesn't germinate I'll just use the other.
3. 1459 Sundstrom and 1121 Bobier - these two do battle, one survives!
4. 1392 Breznick (904 Stelts X 1502 Wallace) The 904 produces nice orange. This seed is getting some buzz for a first year seed, and I have two.
5. 955 Brinkley - Orange.

I might throw in some 720 Warren seeds as backup on the orange sites.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Giant Pumpkin Seminar Coming

I just signed up with a local nursery to do a giant pumpkin seminar. The date is March 26th, at Town and Country Gardens in Pocatello. More details to come. I hope we can generate more interest in growing the giants in our area.

Monday, January 12, 2009

The seed list, Revision 1.0

Here is the annual 2009 seed list, first draft. Of course, this is incomplete, and will change a half-dozen times before mid-April. Five plants this year. Each seed has a confidence level on it. This is a guess on the scale of 1 to 10 as to how confident I am in wanting to plant the seed.

1. 964 Wolf - confidence level 10

2. 779 Warren - confidence level 10

3. 1121 Bobier - confidence level 7

4. 1191 Zunino - confidence level 5

5. ?? - something orange? or big? I don't know.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Seed germination...

I was reading Brian's page (see the link from this blog) and noting the seed germination experiment that Brian and his daughter are doing. I find it fascinating that at 80 degrees they got 43% germination, at 85 degrees they got 83%, and at 90 degrees, 84%. Take a look. This supports the long-time rule of thumb... get those seeds up to 85 degrees Fahrenheit if you want to have good results!

2009

Here we are in 2009. This is the really slow time for us giant pumpkin enthusiasts. Actually, last night I got the bug and decided that I would do some test germinations of last year's seeds. But then I went looking for potting soil and found that we don't have any in the house. But within three or four weeks, early season germinations of tomatoes and such will begin again!

I'm also on the lookout for the seed distribution from the NYSGPGA. Yes, I love New York.

Meanwhile, due to the downturn in the economy, in the first half of the coming year I need to take some time off (without pay). What this means is, I'll have lots of time to work on the pumpkin patch and the garden. I won't have a lot of extra money to spend on it. No vacations, just staying home, so I should have lots of time. Fortunately I still have a job, and in the industry I'm in that's pretty good.