How Farmers Grow Tiny Seeds Into Those Massive Pumpkins

Judges measure as volunteers examine the entries prior to the giant pumpkin contest weigh-off at the Rochester Fair in Rochester, N.H. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

By MICHELLE R. SMITH, ASSOCIATED PRESS

COVENTRY, Rhode Island (AP) — Ron Wallace grows pumpkins nearly the size of a Fiat.

From the pumpkin patch in his Rhode Island backyard, Wallace has become the rock star of giant pumpkin-growing. He was the first person in the world to break the 2,000-pound, or 1-ton, barrier when he grew a 2,009-pound (911-kilogram) pumpkin in 2012, and he previously broke the world record in 2006. A friend calls him a “mainstreamer,” someone whose passion for the hobby has spread word to the broader public.

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Wallace, a country club manager, has spent 27 years at the hobby, swapping ideas with growers worldwide. A greenhouse grower in Switzerland holds the current world record: 2,323 pounds (1,054 kilograms), grown from a Wallace seed.

About 30,000 people grow giant fruits and vegetables competitively, and pumpkins are most popular, said Andy Wolf, president of the Great Pumpkin Commonwealth.“

Giant-pumpkin grower Ron Wallace holds a single seed at the pumpkin patch in his garden outside his home in Greene, R.I. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

"All walks of life. Doctors, lawyers, farmers,” Wallace says. “The bond is giant pumpkins.”

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It all starts with the seed. Top growers know their pumpkins’ lineage back generations, and the Great Pumpkin Commonwealth keeps records.

Seeds from Wallace’s 2,009-pound pumpkin have sold for more than $1,000 in a charity auction. Wallace has seen counterfeits sold on eBay. Still, many growers freely swap seeds with each other or lobby top growers to use a seed they think is promising.

Like most serious growers, Wallace ties plants’ blossoms closed and hand-pollinates them so he can be sure of the mother (the seed) and the father (the pollinator) and protect them from bees carrying pollen from a neighbor’s squash.

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The vines can grow 1 foot (30 centimeters) or more per day, and pumpkins can put on 45 pounds (20 kilograms) per day, mostly from water. The best pumpkins every year follow the weather. If conditions were right in the Ohio Valley, growers there might see a string of huge pumpkins. When there’s a drought, as in California, don’t expect a bumper crop.

With his giant pumpkin entry on a trailer behind his pickup truck, Ron Wallace drives past other entries as he arrives for a competition at the Rochester Fair in Rochester, N.H.. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Standing in Wallace’s fields, a person feels smaller. Around the edges where he grows flowers and vegetables, his sunflowers have reached 18 feet (5.5 meters). A tomato plant produced a 5-pound (2.3-kilograms) tomato. Wallace has spent more than two decades painstakingly researching soil science and experimenting. This year, he launched a product based on his growing program, Wallace Organic Wonder. It includes among its ingredients mycorrhizal fungi. He calls it a superfungus that helps deliver water and nutrients.

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“For growers who are competitive, it’s year-round. They’re studying, they’re researching, they’re building greenhouses, they’re looking at genetics,” Wallace said. “Most competitive giant pumpkin growers aren’t taking summer vacations.”

Wallace, who’s single, works up to 40 hours a week on his hobby, checking for mice and disease and burying vines, keeping pumpkins covered in sheets to protect the skin.

Most growers end up spending hundreds or thousands of dollars per year. If they’re lucky, they can sell what they grow for a holiday display for $1 a pound, maybe more for a state record, but they say they rarely make money or break even.

Ron Wallace, right, drops the rear gate of a trailer holding one of the giant pumpkins he grew this season prior to the weigh-off at the Rochester Fair in Rochester, N.H. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

One place these pumpkins won’t end up: pumpkin pie. They’re too big to be tasty.

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The weigh-off is the moment of truth. Crews check for holes, cracks and rot, which would disqualify the entry, before putting it on the scale.

“You can do anything. You can tinker with professional plant hormones or whatever fertilizer you think’s going to give you an advantage,” Wolf said. “The only thing you can’t do is somehow doctor the actual fruit.”

Wallace took the biggest pumpkin he grew this season to a weigh-off on Oct. 10. He won top prize weeks earlier at the Rochester Fair in New Hampshire, with a 1,975-pound (896-kilogram) gourd. Wallace estimates disease cost his Warren pumpkin as much as 150 pounds (68 kilograms), and he was wary before the weigh-in.

“I really ratcheted up with water this year,” he said.

The result was a victory: 2,230 pounds (1,011 kilograms), a new North American record. It’s the second-biggest pumpkin ever grown and the largest grown worldwide this year.