July 2008
Transcription
July 2008
Port Elgin Pumpkinfest Oct. 4th & 5th 2008 www.pumpkinfest.org [email protected] 1-800-387-3456 SUMMER 2008 GROWERS VINE Brought to you by Port Elgin Pumpkinfest and the GVGO Don’t forget to update your address books with the new GVGO email address [email protected] News F r o m t h e GV G O by Phil hunt pres. gvgo Finally the warmer winds of summer are starting to appear in many of Ontario gardens. After a long winter with record snow levels in many areas & a cooler than normal May & parts of June, we are finally starting to see some real growth in the plants. Cool & wet have been the normal in most regions while some have seen floods & freezes. Mother nature is sure showing her power & abusing it in some regions. The mid-west US have seen more than its share of rain & tornadoes. Lets hope July, August & September’s weather is more favorable to our members. Remembering The Pumpkin King As most of you know by now, The Pumpkin King, Howard Dill past away this May. He was a true gentleman that always had time to talk to whomever he met. His life was filled with many accomplishments, including the creation of the Atlantic Giant pumpkin seed. He will be fondly remembered & sadly missed by thousands of people through out the World. Here is an insert from the CTV News Story about his passing. “Nova Scotia’s legendary pumpkin grower Howard Dill, whose massive gourds were used as row boats in an annual event, has passes away at the age of 73. Howard studied genetics to unlock the secrets of growing monster pumpkins, and created an internationally recognized seed called the Atlantic Giant. “He learned genetics himself, crossing different plants, “ his son, Danny Dill, told CTV Atlantic. “That’s when he created the world record at the time -- 400 pounds -- in the early eighties.” As the news of his death spread, letters began appearing at a wooden statue of Dill in downtown Windsor, N.S., the city he made famous. “He brought so much to the town,” says Mayor Anna Allen, “ He was the biggest tourist draw in our town. He was loved by many, many people.” Dill, known as the “Pumpkin King,” won four straight world titles with his GVGO 4376 Hwy 35 N Cameron, ON K0M 1G0 www.gvgo.ca [email protected] 705-887-4835 e n i V s i h t Inside Pg 1-4 News from the GVGO Pg 4-Pumpkinfest Update Pg 5-6 Western News Pg 6 Southern News Pg 6-7 Western Canada News Pg 7 Eastern News Pg 8 Northwestern News Pg 8 News from Quebec Pg 9 News from the East Coast Pg 9-10 News from Overseas Pg 10-11 My walk amongst the giants Pg 11 Top 10 Pg 12-14 Compost Tea & Powdery Mildew Pg 15 How I grew my 1524.5 Pg 16-19 Pesticides 101 Pg 20 Raffle Information Pg 21-22 GVGO Clothing Pg 23 Frost the deadly Encounter Pg 24-25 Grower Profile Pg 26-27 Why use Sugary Supplements Pg 28-29 Plant Size & Pumpkin Lobes Pg 30 Howard’s Dirt Pg 30-32 Tissue Testing Pg 32-33 Humic Acid Discount Pg 33-34 93 Pumpkin Sayings Pg 34 Patch Tour Pg 35 Final Word Also included as attachments: Weigh Off Information SNGPG Howard Dill Article & 1 spellbound when Joe started sharing his ideas & techniques. A pumpkins -- a feat that has never been duplicated. He also inspired an annual event in Nova Scotia, called the Pumpkin Regatta, in which participants carve out giant pumpkins and use them as boats to row across Lake Pesaquid. Danny Dill said his family panned to carry on his father’s pumpkin business, promising that this year’s crop would be extra special. “He was bound and determined to start another bunch of plants this year, which he did a few weeks ago,” he said. Cabbage Winners for 2007 (L-R) Dennis Hartung, John Butler, Art Johnson & George Lloyd Missing: Deanna Lloyd “We got some in the ground just the other day for him and we told him they were in, so he was happy.” Aside from pumpkins, Dill had a passion for hockey. Long Pond, considered by some sports historians to be the birthplace of hockey, is located on his land. When doctors first diagnosed his illness, many of his childhood hockey heroes sent him letters of encouragement. And before his death, he had received a letter from a present-day hockey star and fellow Nova Scotian. “Just the other day an envelope came from Pittsburgh and we opened it up, and it was an autographed photo of Sidney Crosby,” said Danny Dill. “He was dad’s favourite player.” Joe Jutras speaks at the GVGO’s Growers Seminar in Thornton The GVGO’s annual grower’s seminar & award ceremony was a great success. There were @ 70 people in attendance to hear WR holder Joe Jutras (1689#) tell us how he grew his massive fruit. Russ & Shannon Landry hosted a welcoming BBQ for Joe & his lovely wife Sue on the Saturday night before the seminar. About 30 growers & spouses attended this wonderful evening & all were special thanks go out to Russ & Shannon Landry for hosting this wonderful evening. out as much as possible. it’s because of Lisa & her team that we are able to put out the quality of newsletter that you’ve become accustom to receiving. We look forward to continually working with them to help bring you one of the best newsletters in the pumpkin community. Sally Hunt was present to accept the plaque on behalf of the Pumpkinfest team. This year the GVGO presented over 50 awards to our members for their outstanding achievements in 2007. We’d like to thank Joe & his wonderful wife Sue for coming up & sharing the weekend with us. Your presentation was awesome & we really enjoyed spending time with you both again. The Seminar was also a place for us to recognize & honor some of GVGO gets New Email Address our fellow GVGO Members who The GVGO has a new email have excelled in this fascinating address. As of June 6th, the hobby. This year we honored 5 GVGO’s new email address is: growers for all their hard work & [email protected] great accomplishments The old email address will be throughout their growing careers. terminated as of June 30th. We The 1st inductees to the new look forward to hearing great GVGO Hall of FAme are Alan Eaton, Bill Greer, John Lyons, George Lloyd & Dave McCallum. All 5 of these growers are very deserving of this award. They are also awarded a lifetime membership with the GVGO. We appreciate all they’ve done in the past to bring this hobby to the level we see today. Congratulations to all of you. Watermelon Winners for 2007 (L-R) We also recognized the Port Elgin Pumpkinfest ladies for all their help & support since the inception of the GVGO. Lisa Irwin & her team have been there from the beginning, helping us Darrell Leonard, Tyler Leonard, Bob mackenzie, Eric Sundin Missing: Laurie Laforge things form our members this summer. The reason for the change is that we have finally 2 been able to get high-speed service in our area. will be posted later in the newsletter. We look forward to seeing you all there. Please contact John Vincent at: [email protected] for more details & to register. We need to know how many people will be in attendance for planning the lunch. Thanks. Cancer Society Fundraising Raffle & Donation Dill himself this past January. All proceeds will go to the Cancer Society in honor of Howard Dill & all AG growers & their families who have suered with this terrible disease. We hope that you’ll help support our eorts. Tickets will be $2 each or 6 for $10 or 12 for $20. Details will be posted inside the newsletter. 1000# Club & Master Growers Award Long Gourd Winners for 2007 (L-R) Al Eaton, Glenn Cheam, Chris Lyons, Phil Joynson Missing: John Lyons The GVGO held 2 raes during the Annual Niagara Convention & the Membership Dues for 2009 GVGO’s Grower’s Seminar The GVGO will be raising its & raised $400 for the annual dues from $20 per year to Cancer Society. The $25 per year. Family GVGO added another memberships will remain the $100 to this total in same at $35. This increase was memory of Howard Dill (in discussed at the GVGO Seminar & lieu of flowers-as per Hall of FAme (L-R Top-Bottom) -Al Eaton all in attendance were in favor of families request) for a -Phil Hunt (Pres) & Russ Landry the increase for the 2009 growing present Dave McCallum total donation of $500. On -Phil H. Presents George Lloyd season. Friday May 25th, Jane -Phil H. Present to Chris Lyons (accepting on behalf of John Lyons) Hunt (GVGO Tres) presented Heather Heavy Hitter Panel To further reward our local Richardson (Cancer growers & to encourage them to society rep.) with the excell, the GVGO will award check. We look forward Ontario growers with a patch to to working more with CS every grower who joins the 1000# to help raise funds to club. They find a cure for this will also be horrible disease. rewarded The GVGO will be for each hosting a rae new level this summer with they reach Patch Tour the proceeds going to the after that. Cancer Society. The top 3 The 4th Annual GVGO Patch Tour (1100# prizes are signed, will feature the Eastern region of club, 1200# numbered (by the artist), Ontario. We will visit the gardens club, 1300# limited edition prints of the of John Vincent, Dave Pitura, club etc.) Jane Hunt (GVGO Tres.) painting “Great beginnings” presents Arnold Vader, John Lyons, and Jim Only Heather Richardson (Cancer by Elly Wilson. these prints Ives. As usual the Tour is free to Ontario Society) with a $500 donation in are one of only 15 signed by all GVGO members. There will be Growers memory of Howard Dill on the Pumpkin King, Howard a small charge for lunch. Details behalf of the GVGO qualify for 3 this award, as most other clubs & regions already do this for their local membership. Patches will be sent out with your 2009 membership seed packages. You must have been a GVGO Ontario member the year you grew the pumpkin to qualify for the patch. They would look real good on your new GVGO spring jacket. To get more details about the jacket, please contact me at our new email address. The Master Growers Award is the brainchild of our VP Phil Joynson. He wanted to promote the growth of the other giant veggies we see at the weigh os, while challenging our Ontario growers to grow bigger pumpkins. His idea would see a GVGO Ontario grower be awarded a Master Growers Jacket by growing three (3) dierent veggies to World Class size. Only the fruit or veggies we already recognize for awards would qualify for this award. You must grow a fruit or veggie bigger than these World Class levels listed below to qualify. Only giant vegetables grown since the GVGO’s inception (2005) would be recognized for this award. Remember, you don’t have to grow them all in one year, but they must have been grown after the spring of 2005 to qualify & you must have been a member the year the fruit was grown. Pumpkins - 1400# or heavier True Green Squash - 1150# or heavier Long Gourds- 120” or longer Watermelons - 200# or heavier Tomatoes - 4.5# or heavier Cabbage- 60# or heavier Tall Corn - 275” or taller Tall Sunflower - 250” or taller Please contact us if you have any questions about this or any other GVGO award or event. In closing I’d like to wish all GVGO members all the best this season. Remember to do all the little things this summer & it’ll reward you with a big monster this fall. Don’t forget to visit our website at : www.gvgo.ca and register to use the message board. It’s a great way to get quick answers to any questions you might have. We hope to see as many of you as possible at our Summer Patch tour in August. See you at the weigh os. Take care, good luck & grow them big! P u mp k i n f e s t Update by Lisa Irwin Coordinator WOW, it is hard to believe that it is already July. It seems like just yesterday we were in Niagara during a great snowstorm! Speaking of Niagara, what a time that was! This year we approached the GPC for their help with the convention. A great partnership has been formed and I am truly grateful for everything they did through out the process. You deserve a round of applause for your eorts and you have become a great asset to the Niagara Convention! The 2009 convention is going to be even better!! I’d also like to thank Eddy Z for everything that he does to support not only the convention but pumpkin growing in general. You are truly one of a kind Eddy and we are all lucky to know you! As some of you may have heard, Pumpkinfest 2008 will be my last here in Port Elgin. I have decided to return to school in September 2009, so I will work here until August 2009 and then hand over the reins to our new sta member Kristyn Kline. Kristyn has been hired this July so that she will have a full year to learn all there is to know before I go. For those of you who have been at Port Elgin Pumpkinfest you may know Kristyns dad Jim, who is one of our weigh o volunteers. Welcome to the Team Kristyn!! One of the other big changes here at Pumpkinfest is our decision to go to two days of GPC weigh os. Previously our Sunday weigh o was limited to growers from the Bruce, Grey & Huron Counties. Starting October 2008, the Sunday weigh o will be open to all growers. I have included further along in the Grower’s Vine a copy of the new prize structure. The rules can be found on www.pumpkinfest.org, or if you don’t have internet by calling 1-800-387-3456 and we will mail them to you. We were quite honoured to be recognized at the GVGO spring seminar. Thank you to all of you for that. Our plaque hangs proudly at Pumpkinfest Headquarters! Congratulations to all of you who won awards during that ceremony. Good luck to you all this summer and see you in October!!! 4 Western Region News BY RUSS LANDRY, GPC Canada East The possibility of late-summer GVGO intrigue seems closer than ever. All that needs to happen now is to pile a few more interesting months upon the most successful growers convention (IGVGC) and the best ever GVGO seminar. Incredible and mounting attention seen in this years spring gatherings is remarkable. Nearly 250 people attended the Niagara Falls convention in what was easily the mostly instructive and informative event ever. The convention was jointly run by the Port Elgin gang of Lisa Irwin and her dedicated crew and Dave Stelts and the GPC executive committee. Quickly on the heels of Niagara was the GVGO seminar and 1st annual party. Seventy five members attended this year’s addition clamoring to see Joe Jutras and recognize the first inductees into the GVGO Hall of Fame. The party was a wonderful good time attended by thirty of the best growers including husband and wife teams from across the province and held to welcome Joe and Sue Jutras to GVGO land. The GVGO nation is showing a growing penchant and determination to reenter the realm of regional worldwide leader in pumpkin weights. When it comes to clubs and regions the Ontario collection of growers from all over the planet is beginning to shine. A slow and steady hand has guided the club in finally reaching the dreams of President Phil Hunt and Vice President Phil Joynson. Already boasting the pumpkin community’s best newsletter and rae, the GVGO brain trust is steadily focused now on improving performance. The club is on the edge of prominence as several members could reach new weights this year. Many growers now enter as seasoned veterans after years of heartache and apprenticeship. Education has been stressed all winter and spring in what has become a recurring GVGO theme. Sharing and focusing on new techniques while coming together as a group has been continually stressed. Web site trac in the message boards is also up and so is the quality of the ongoing discussions. Several of last years heavy hitters frequent the site and often contribute while lurking about. Lurking is an honor we could well be come accustomed to for it is the desire to not miss any small tidbit of information which compels the growers to seek out the secrets of growing giants in the message boards. The new GVGO Growers Pool will promote the eort while fostering good competitive spirit while each of us cheer for another club member. Hall of Fame awards recognizing grower life time achievement are the pinnacle of success and determination. Hats o and hearty atta boy goes to inductees Dave McCallum, John Lyons, Alan Eaton, Bill Greer, George Lloyd. Growers continue to emerge from around the province coming from all corners trying to tip the scales. The grower’s co-operative has seen a boost in sales too. The sheer numbers of bags and jugged supplies brought to the seminar was enough to fill a couple of trucks this year. Growers who are sharing in the cost and distribution of materials area major benefactor of such an eort. A huge collective thanks goes from my hand to those who contribute to this annual exchange. In the weigh o department there is a couple of new western regional to review. Firstly the big news is Port Elgin will now run two full wide open GPC weigh-os on Saturday and Sunday. the Sunday event is now open for all due to prior year’s declining attendance and the Port Elgin sta have thrust open a new day for all of us. The much talked abut merger of the Cornerstone and Woodbridge Fair GPC events is now ocially o. After several discussions both groups have decided to host their own full GPC wiegh-os this 5 coming fall. The Woodbridge Fair, October 11th looks to build prize structure and attendance this year while Cornerstone prizes will focus on pumpkins or squash in a later time AUGUST 24, 2008 East Central Ontario GVGO Pumpkin Patch Tour 2008 Visit the patches of Dave Pitura Frank Penner John Vincent & Brian McGill Arnold Vader Jim Ives John & Chris Lyons Long held as the world leader in pumpkins, squash and genetic production thanks to Bill Greer, Todd Kline, George Lloyd, Al Eaton, Bob Mackenzie, Brant Timm and Brad Wursten the GVGO is poised to jump another notch on the grower’s belt. Moving now into the summer it is certainly possible Full details further on in that here in this club Grower’s Vine lies the ability to crown the next world slot of October champion in pumpkins. 25th in order to build the event and support Jack-O-Lantern sales. As the bar is raised so too will the eorts put forth by each grower. The desire to compete with the best of the world is the driving force behind the GVGO. The eort of time spent is often directly proportional to size therefore it is important to remember to not stretch resources too thinly. Staying in touch with each other and Good Luck & Good Growing! S out he r n Ne w s by George Lloyd Growers here seem to be o to a good start. If Mother nature cooperates and with some goodluck, there should be a few good ones grown in this area. The Norfolk County Fair in Simcoe Ontario is oering the same cash prize money as last year. fist prize pumpkin money will be $200 and Squash will be $500. The weigh-o is Sunday Oct. 5th. You must register one week in advance! For more The Orange Jacket Crew (L-R) information call (519) todd Kline, Joe Jutras, Ron Wallace, Larry Checkon, Steve Daletas 426-7280 or visit Missing: Al Eaton, Gary Burke, Bill Greer their web-site communicate your experiences by what ever means you can, will help the collective eort of the GVGO. www.norfokcountyfair.com. In April, Ron Wray and I attended the GVGO seminar in Thorton Ontario. It was a most enjoyable day for all. Those involved with putting it on did a great job and are to be congratulated for their eorts. Congratulations also go out to all the award winners. Many beautiful trophies and plaques were handed out for each ones individual eort. All well earned. One person who I think really stands out and deserves all the praise and thanks we can give him is Dave McCallum for without his eorts over the years, growing pumpkins or other vegetables in Canada would not mean much. He has been the glue that has held it all together over the years. For all of us...Thank you Dave. Western Canada News by Craig Sandvik Hello from the wet land again. This has to be the worst spring I can remember in many years. A number of growers on the island have been having problems with their plants this spring and I’m sure the weather has something to do with it. Both Jake Van Kooten and Dave Pley have pulled a plant this year already. My 1231 Pukos has double vined and my 1041 wants to go straight up, not horizontal :o) A few growers on the island are heating their plants at night with ceramic heaters and this really seams to be helping the plants. Apparently Glenn Dixon has a 1420 LaRue that’s 8 ft long already. that’s the best plant I’ve heard of so far. My best is only 6 ft and that’s the 1407 Hemphill. April was so wet, it was hard to get patch prep done and then at the end of April we had 3 or 4 days of 30 degree weather and everybody worked like crazy to 6 get the hootchs up and plants out. That and the odd couple of days here and there are all the good weather we have had. Normal morning temp is 47/48 degrees F. The good news is the weather seems to be improving and maybe by the start of summer we’ll get a spring. That’s all for now! Editor Note: This is Craig’s last article for the “Grower’s Vine”. We would like thank Craig for his efforts writing his aritlces for the newsletter. If you’re intrested in taking over the “Western Canada News” column, please drop me a line at [email protected]. EASTERN ONTARIO NEWS BY JOHN VINCENT Like a good Canadian should, I always start out talking about the weather! Overall, we have had worse springs, if I can say that. yes, it has been colder and wetter than normal. Last spring I think I only had heat on in my hoop houses a total of three nights, over the month or so they were up. While this spring on the other hand, there were only about three nights they were turned o! By early June, it was clear that the plants were all a couple weeks behind normal, however in the last week or so, the plants have done a remarkable amount of growing and have basically “caught up” to last year. I know a few growers to the north of me that invested in soil heat cables this year and initially their plants were ahead of mine, however in recent comparisons, it looks like mine have caught up. I know I am down in the banana belt here in Prince Edward The Prince Edward County County, and our nights can be Pumpkin Growers are pleased to much warmer than even 20 miles be hosting the 2008 GVGO patch north of here. I’m still not tour this summer on August 24th. convinced that I need heating Please check out the related cables. information through out the The buzz this season seems to be newsletter. Be sure to order your on compost tea. I finally broke commemorative T-shirt. down this year and decided to try Proceeds will go to the Wellington this voodoo snake oil potion. I weigh o. know it’s fun to make and the equipment looks cool. the The Community of Keene, near elaborate set up with the fancy air Peterborough will hold a new pump took a little explaining to weigh o this year for the first my wife: what’s that for? What did time on October 25th. This will you pay for that...and so on. The not be a GPC sanctioned event brewing this year; part is an however they OK will allow process, reweighs so we but the expect to see applying some decent and the pumpkins. clean up Brian Hugli will are a pain again host the in the Brant Timm presents Green Jacket weight o at butt. Oh & Trophy to Jos Ghaye (accepting on behalf of Brad Wursten) Pembroke on well, I need September 27th more things at Hugli’s Blueberry Ranch. This to keep me busy in the patch is a GPC sanctioned event. Check anyway. out Brian’s web site at: The Prince Edward County www.blueberryranch.ca Pumpkin Growers are ramping up The Prince Edward County 4-H for another great weigh o at Giant Pumpkin and Vegetable Wellington, again this year. This club is o to another great year. year’s event will be held on Again, our achievement day Saturday, October 18th. Check (Weigh-o) will be held at Picton out the website for more fair, on Friday September 5th. information: www.pec.on.ca/ Thank you to the GVGO and to the pumpkinfest/index.html. This PEC Pumpkin Growers for their year we are enhancing the weigh continued support. o by joining the GPC at the premium level. In addition we will increase and expand the prize package. Be sure to come early for the parade. This is definitely a family event. Have you got a great story or pictures you would like to see featured in an upcoming growers vine?? Stories and Pictures can be submitted to Editor Phil Joynson at [email protected] 7 Northwestern Ontario News By Ben Johnson As we begin our growing season, for every grower young and old this is a time of excitement and sometimes disappointment. We in Northwestern Ontario are experiencing a very slow start to the season. The weather has not been co-operating for us. It has been very cool with lack of sunshine and lots of rain and high winds! Which puts us quite behind form last year. We are all hoping for a hot July, August and September. For all those growers that have plants that are doing great I wish you all the best, and for those who are some what behind, I would like to say don’t worry, there’s still time to grow a giant pumpkin for the weigh o. A good friend once told me.....remember, there’s always next year! Good Luck and all the best. News From Quebec By Claude Colbert The Potirothon of Gentilly Like may major competitions, Potirothon took birth through a bragging. Indeed, our Dean Gilbert Provencher wanted one day to launch a challenge to its neighbour C.H. Cormier who boasted of growing a pumpkin weighing over 80 pounds. Our friend Gilbert was “coached” that year by his son Renald who had bought AG seeds in Monteral. Also, a few of these seeds were distributed to some friends for that contest. Gilbert won the first prize with a giant pumpkin weighing 114 pounds and this became the first recipient of the Golden Pumpkin trophy. This happened in 1991. Year after year, more and more people have joined this friendly competition. The Potirothon of Gentilly is certainly become that largest competition of giant pumpkins in the province of Quebec. More than 70 teams of growers are registered to the 18th edition in 2008. Our season starts with a seed give away meeting in the spring. All registered members receive a packet of seeds from the pumpkins of our top growers as well as seeds swapped with other clubs in Canada and the USA. Each year we count on the generosity of many growers of Ontario to get great pumpkin seeds. Special thanks to Phil Hunt, president of GVGO, for the large packet of club seeds exchanged with the Potirothon. Also, a special thanks to individual growers who share their seeds with us for our members. In August, we have a great patch tour. The tour begins in the morning. Participants are transported by school bus to visit the many patches around Gentilly. Participants can visit the patch of the best growers as well as those of first time growers. The day ends with a picnic in the evening. The culminating event of the season is the ocial weigh o of pumpkins. The weigh o is always scheduled on the last Saturday of September in the village of Gentilly. The weigh o site is located halfway between Montreal and Quebec City on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River near Trois-Rivieres. This year, the weigh o is planned on Saturday, September 27th. 10 AM Unloading of pumpkins and registration 1 PM Weigh off start and activities (on site animation, lunch bar, information desk, and so on) 4 PM Awards and ceremony (Golden Pumpkin Trophy for heaviest pumpkin; P’tit Gilbert trophy for the prettiest pumpkin) Two weeks later, we have a pumpkins regatta on the Becancour River. The pumpkins are transformed into boats for this last event of the season. Hundreds of people watch from the shore to see our competitors in action. What do we win at Potirothon? Glory and Honour for the next 12 months! Let us remember that the Potirothon is born of a simple challenge. the perpetual trophy “Golden Pumpkin” is given to anyone who grows the heaviest pumpkin. We don’t have any prize money at the weigh o and the regatta. Our members are invited in the early season, to make bets with each other for the honour of being awarded the “Golden Pumpkin”. Each contestant will fulfill their commitments with great honours to his fellow grower. 8 News From the East Coast By Dawn Northrup The East coast is mourning the loss of Howard Dill, along with the rest of the Atlantic Giant Growers from around the world. As I made the four hour trip to Nova Scotia to give my condolences to the Dill Family, my mind was flooded with wonderful memories of Dawn Northrup & Howard. Whether it was visiting with him on the farm, sitting on his porch having lighthearted conversations, he always took the time to give us a private patch tour, which I will always cherish. One of the highlights of the weigh o in Windsor was having Howard pose with me for a photo with my pumpkin each year. It was nice that Howard was able to plant some pumpkin seeds this spring and as you probably saw on the internet, Howard left with a special seed. This touched my heart deeply. Howard is a true inspiration. Because of Howard, I have been able to meet growers from around the world that otherwise I would have never met. These acquaintances have blossomed into some great friendships that will be sure to last a lifetime! Howard will always have a special place in my heart. After a long cold storm filled winter, spring finally arrived, some earlier than others. Through a reliable source, Nova Scotia with its less than normal snow fall and warmer temperatures are two weeks ahead of last year. While on the other hand, heavy snow fall in New Brunswick has caused the worst flooding along the Saint John River in 35 years, preventing some growers from growing this year. In an interview with Dennis Daigle he says his plants are doing Howard Dill 2007 really well this year. His plants are about 6 feet long and he hasn’t seen any cucumber beetles yet (early June). Dennis was inspired to start growing pumpkins by seeing an impressive pumpkin display at Herman Dixon’s in Albert County. He stopped in and Herman told him to contact Howard Dill. Dennis has been growing for the last 10 years and is a very dedicated grower. He has pumpkins at four dierent farms, which involves traveling an hour each day to tend his pumpkins. One of the farms belongs to David & Elizabeth Steeves. Elizabeth’s plants are also doing well. Dennis waters by hand in each location. This year he is planning on installing a gas water pump to help him with his watering. Dennis tents to grow orange genetics because he loves beautiful orange pumpkins. His favorite seed of all time is the 810 Dill. He grew the 1092 out of this in 2002, which was his personal best. Also the 810 Dill produced the famous 670 Daigle. His seed line up for the year includes the: 500 Northrup, 772 Poirier, 919 Richards, 730 Dill in honour of Howard Dill, and the 1689 Jutras. His plan is to use the 1689 Jutras as a pollinator. Dennis is trying some new techniques this year. He tried using heating cables on two of his plants and noticed a big dierence so he decided to try Joel Holland’s soluble seaweed powder and soluble fish powder as well. Bill & I wish all growers the best of luck this season! News From Overseas By Brad Wursten Each region has its specific growing diculties. The same holds true for Europe. The Fins and (northern) Swedes have short growing seasons. Spain and Italy has hot and often dry summers. England and the Netherlands generally get flooded and night temperatures hardly ever get past 12 degrees C, even in the dead of summer. This year things have been a bit more dicult than usual. On June 17 it froze in the Netherlands, a country that hardly experiences frost even in the winter. The same happened in Finland, but they are used to it there. It doesn’t make it easier though. France and other parts of central Europe got hit with storms and flooding. Parts of England and the Netherlands were so dry growers spent the time they usually use rowing through their 9 patches to see how things are floating with watering. Just like the other side of the big pond, many Europeans spend the whole winter season getting their seed list put together. Every year it is amusing to see which of those seeds actually get grown. I’ve heard from many European growers why the plants in the garden aren’t the ones from their list. Here are a few reasons. Some didn’t germinate. One Finnish grower had them in the ground for three weeks and was still wondering when it would come up. Some of them germinated but were too weak to survive. Some turned out to be double vined or even worse, ribbon vined. Some young plants just cracked in two...that would be mine. Others got their hoop houses blown to shreds, yet others put a little too much fertilizer on the plants...that would be in Finland. Some got frozen and some got a bit too wet. Some lost all their plants and had to get backups from other growers...that would be Finland again. Some say the European pumpkin record will fall this year. The people that are most expected to break the record sandbag. I don’t of course. I really DID lose my best plant and it DID freeze on June 17 and my main squash DIDN’T produce secondary vines on the one side of the plant. And the weather forecast IS cold and rain. I am currently repairing a hole in my canoe, just to make sure! My Walk Amongst the Giants By Fred Hain What happened to the good old days? A time when we put a wheelbarrow or two of cow manure & some fertilizer in & around the stump site, filled it in, planted a pumpkin seed, watered it, watch it grow & spend 15 minutes a day on maintenance. Well, the result was a 56-pound pumpkin, which I entered at the London Fair. I was so proud! First place went to a pumpkin weighing in a at 120-pounds & boy did it look big! I was hooked from the start. That was about 25 years ago & I had just retired from the Armed Forces after serving for 25 years. Being able to strip and assemble an assault rifle with my eyes blind folded in not time at all, I though, how hard can it be to grow a big pumpkin! I started to investigate seeds & found & ordered a package of 10 Dill’s Atlantic Giant Pumpkin seeds, but only one germinated, while the rest went rotten. Of course I blamed it on bad seeds. LOL. I did manage to grow a pumpkin over 100 pounds, but unfortunately it rotted in the garden (I had it sitting on a piece of rubberized Styrofoam). Perhaps I should have kept stripping & assembling a rifle instead. However, I don’t give up so easily, so I bought a book written by Al Kingsbury called “The Pumpkin King”. Reading about Howard Dill really got me motivated & things started to improve year after year. I heard about the Port Elgin Pumpkinfest & my wife Dorothy & I decided we should drive up & have a look. It was held at the Curling Rink at the time & for the first time, we had a good look at 400 & 500 pound pumpkins. Wow! I was really hooked now. I started attending the Port Elgin Giant Pumpkin Seminars held every spring. I bought an AG seed from John Lyons, who was a member of the panel & did an interesting presentation. I grew my first big pumpkin from that seed & weighed in at just a few pounds over 500#. I never looked back after that. My free time also became less & less as most of my time became dedicated to my pumpkin patch. Skipping ahead to 2008. This year I missed the IGVG Convention in Niagara Falls for the 1st time, due the biggest snowstorm this past winter. The good old days are definitely gone. Today, preparing the pumpkin patch for planting is a great challenge on what or what not to use. A soil test is a must, less & less chemical fertilizers are now used & organic amendments, compost tea, tea soup and so on are now a must. We have come a long way since William Warnock grew the first big pumpkin in 1893 and set a new World Record with a 365 pound pumpkin. And what did he use 10 for fertilizer? Only cattle and chicken manure. The stump site was dug 14” deep and seven feet in diameter. My personal best was an 1160pound pumpkin. I didn’t believe we would reach the 1000pound mark and now the Fred with his 950.5# sights are set on reaching the 2000-pound mark. Will it ever happen? Looking back over the years I must say that I had a lot of fun and met so many great growers and made many good friends, especially John Butler and Art Johnson. Both of them are convinced that I attended the Chicago World’s Fair in 1883 with William Warnock. What is amazing still are the questions people ask, for example were steroids used on the plants. I’m sure we’ve all heard them, but every once in awhile a new one pops up. I remember one lady looking at one of my 15’ sunflowers sitting in a pot of water that was on display at the London Western Fair and she asked how many years it took to grow it that tall. When I brought a class from Fanshawe College that I was teaching to see my pumpkin patch, I was telling them that a pumpkin can grow 20-30 pounds or more a day. Of course, they politely told me that I was full of B. S. While walking around the patch one of the students looked at the tall corn and sunflowers, and he whispered in my ear “Boy, could you ever grow marijuana here!” I guess if I did I would get a better return for my money and stay on a high all season long. On another occasion a student brought his family to look at the garden and while walking around kept repeating “Jurassic Park, Jurassic Park!” from 2007 The time is here again when we look at all our A.G. seed stock and try to select the best one we think and hope we will grow the biggest A.G. ever. For me it will be especially hard. I will only grow three plants this year. The dry summer was deadly on my plants last year as they all shut down the same time. A 950 pound pumpkin as we all know doesn’t cut it any more. I pumped 1000 to 2000 litres of water from the well each day but it still was not enough. Dorothy was always worried I would run the well dry. She just doesn’t get it that watering the pumpkins is more important than having a shower! Well in closing, I hope all of you growers pick the right seed, get your patch in good shape and we all get good weather. And luck we can’t do without either. May we all achieve a personal best and one of us I am sure will come up perhaps with a New World Record. 2000 pounds? No way. Top 10 Ideas to Increase Club Membership By Phil Joynson 10. Include cannabis seeds in club seed distribution program. 9. Give away free Leaf play-off tickets with every new membership. (Like that’s ever going to cost us a dime!”) 8. Spread rumour that Joe Jutras makes his compost teas using only old club newsletters. 7. Provide the best newsletter, seed distribution, seminar, growing supply discounts and distribution, web-site, know-how...Oh we already do that! 6. Rename the club newsletter to “Big Melons Quarterly”. 5. Replace stupid “Top 10” list with real easy Sudoku. 4. “Have pole dancers instead of guest speakers at club seminar. 3. Change G.V.G.O to S.T.U.D. It doesn’t actually mean anything but would look better on a T-Shirt 2. Change club name to the Ohio Valley Pumpkin Growers. 1. Kick anyone named “Phil” out of the club. (This includes middle name too..Sorry!) 11 decided to try and explore this area by testing some of the methods that are often talked By Matt DeBacco about. What I think must be looked at very carefully when Introduction about me talking about a biological I am 23 years old and working process is consistency. If you are toward my Master's degree in trying something dierent with Agronomy at the University of every brew you make and you Connecticut. This just apply it, year will be my 8th The GVGO would like to there is no way Thank Matt for Sharing all year growing giant to tell which his hard work & results pumpkins. In the with the Readers of the batch worked past, I have run into GVGO Grower’s Vine better. disease pressure, and I decided to do some Knowing this, I decided not to use yard trimmings as a source research into what new methods of compost; not because this is a were out there for control other bad source of compost, but than the typical chemicals. because it is prone to high Research variability. For example, in the So I began looking into the spring there may be more sticks, concept of compost teas, which and the fall may contain more involves simply making a liquid leaf material. form of a typical solid material. I spent a lot of time carefully Making this liquid allows selecting what my ingredients dierent methods of application were going to be for my tea, and to be used for a variety of here is what I selected: purposes. -Tea ingredients Hearing what some growers were saying, I started my search -Dechlorinated water for some scientific publications, Perhaps the ingredient that is but the data out there was slim. taken for granted is water. But There were a few publications remember you are trying to that did show an improvement in grow microbes in this water. If disease suppression, but the you have city water, check to see methods used were variable. what your water treatment The research presented below is company adds to the water. based on a one-year trial using There is a good chance that Dill's Atlantic Giant Pumpkin chlorine is added, and if this is Plants and studying compost the case, you need to let the tea's ability to suppress powdery water sit at least over night to mildew. allow time for the chlorine to gas o, so that you have an Consistency environment conducive to Noticing that there was a microbe proliferation. noticeable gap in useful information to growers, I Compost Tea & Powdery Mildew Quality compost Next is the source of microbes or compost you add to the water. It is important that you select a quality source. It is dicult to define quality compost based on looks, so I would suggest you try and purchase your compost from a reliable source. Also, to try and reduce variability, I calculated how much compost I needed for the entire season and then purchased that amount before I made my first brew. This ensured that I was dealing with the same batch of compost. The two best sources that I found were Alaskan humus and worm castings, so I decided on using a 50/50 mix of both. The theory behind this is that the Alaskan humus comes from very old materials (about 10,000 years), and the worm castings have more recently active microbes, so by combining the two I felt I could get the best of both. It is also important to think about what type of tea bag you place the compost in. If the pores are too small then you could strain out the organisms you are trying to apply to your garden. On the other hand, if the pores are too large, your delivery system will end up getting clogged. So, a happy medium must be reached. I found that a simple nylon paint strainer mesh bag works great, is easy to get and inexpensive, so buy a few. Microbe food Now that you have the microbes, you must consider what you are 12 going to feed them. Like people, microbes also have some foods they prefer over others, so I try to oer a wide variety to my brew in hopes that everyone will find something they like. Brewer Compost tea requires a brewer, but which is the best? This was the central question I tried to answer. I selected two dierent types of aeration: passive and active. Both types can be made in a relatively short period of time, but the question was is there a dierence between the two types of aeration? There are two main name brands out there. For passively aerated, there is SoilSoup and for actively aerated, there is Keep-It-Simple. Growers have used both with success, but since competitive growers often do not grow control plants, it is dicult to test any dierences. So, I decided to compare both brewers’ products after given the same ingredients to see if one would select a dierent set of organisms that may be helpful in controlling powdery mildew. Methods Experimental layout I was fortunate enough to get part of a field that had many dierent types of other squashes growing, so that plenty of inoculum would be present. The soil had been tested, and adjustments were made to ensure fertile ground. 5 treatment groups I also selected 5 treatment groups and evaluated the performance. Some you will see are combination sprays, and this was based on some of the data I read that a dilution of 40% milk could also help reduce powdery mildew. So, I decided to do two separate sprays on dierent days of the week to try and further improve powdery mildew control. 1. Control - these plants were just observed and allowed me to tell what disease pressure was like in the field 2. Actively aerated compost tea applied early in the week and 40% milk applied later in the week 3. Actively aerated compost tea applied early in the week and bacterial brew + 40% milk applied later in the week. The bacterial brew simply consisted of some SoilSoup nutrient solution (food), and some Serenade MAX. This a bio control that is made up of a specific bacteria to try and propagate more of the bacteria. I applied this special bacteria brew with milk. 4. Passively aerated compost tea applied early in the week and 40% milk applied later in the week 5. Chemical control- for this treatment group I simply sprayed Daconil once every 7-10 days and made observations. Reason for 40% milk The reason I selected 40% milk over the more traditional 10% is that, based on the study I read, it showed some variable results at 10%. Also, I was doing most of my sprays in the early morning when dew is on the leaves, and this water would further dilute my milk concentration. Recipe The recipes I used to make the above treatments are as follows: Compost: (0.8oz. / gallon) of Alaskan Humus 6.1g / 1L (0.8 oz. / gallon) of Worm Castings 6.1g / 1L Nutrients: (1oz. / gallon) of SoilSoup nutrient solution 8.2mL / 1L (0.5tsp / gallon) Organic Gem Fish 0.65mL / 1L (0.5tsp / gallon) Joel Holland Kelp 0.65mL / 1L (0.5tsp / gallon) TurfPro 0.65mL / 1L Bacterial Brew: Serenade MAX (0.5tsp / gallon) 0.65mL / 1L SoilSoup Nutrient Solution (1oz. / gallon) 8.2mL / 1L Length of brews (based on manufactures recommendations) Both the actively and passively aerated brews used the same recipe, and only the method of aeration and brew time diered. The active took only 12-14hrs. and the passive was allowed to brew for 20-24hrs. Each was applied using a simple back-pack sprayer on a 7-10 day schedule. 13 Way used to collect data For powdery mildew, the traditional method of data collection is simple field observations, and this same protocol was used for evaluation of this experiment. aerated compost and milk. So, what I concluded was that the bacteria were not eective against the strain of powdery mildew that infects Dill's Atlantic Giant pumpkin plants. Conclusions, the take-away message I know that there is a lot of information presented above, so here is the basic summary that you can hopefully use during your growing season: Leaf on left from the controlled plot, while the leaf on the right is from the Compost Tea (actively aerated) and 40% milk treatment Field trial results What I noticed after collecting and compiling all the numbers was that there were distinct dierences in the treatment groups. The most surprising results were that the bacterial brew- treated plants became infected with powdery mildew at a rate higher than actively Out of the organic treatments, the actively aerated compost tea and 40% milk treatment did reduce powdery mildew the greatest. While all treatments did reduce powdery mildew when compared to the no treatment control plants, the passively aerated brews rate of infection most similarly matched the control plants, so its degree of eectiveness was concluded as minimal. bacteria, and then brewing-up more will not help increase your tea's eectiveness against powdery mildew. Out of all the organic treatments, the fungicide control was the most effective. For further research I would suggest considering adding an adjuvant, but select one that will not harm the organisms in your brew. This will allow for an increase in the plant area your spray comes in contact with, and will give a more eective coverage area. One paper I read suggested Yucca extract be used. -Refer to Team-Pumpkin Special thanks to my advisor, Dr. Thomas Morris, the University of Connecticut research farm sta, and Phil Hunt for his interest in my research. If you would like to view some of the actual field trial pictures of the direct leaf comparison, please visit www.Team-Pumpkin.org and look for the title "Milk". You can also find some other helpful information on growing giant pumpkins there. Adding Serenade MAX to your compost tea as a source of Paul McIntyre The AG grower’s fraternity lost another good friend in May 2008, when Paul passed away from a sudden heart attack. Paul burst onto the scene in 1996 with an 897-pound pumpkin at Ottawa, his first year of growing them. This achievement placed him #4 in Canada and #5 in the GPC that year. Paul had a great sense of humor and enjoyed many activities including the International Pumpkin Seminars and the 2006 “Pumpkin Cruise” to the Caribbean. He was a great guy who will be sadly missed & fondly remembered by all who knew him 14 How I grew my 1524.5# Pumpkin To further help our members reach their goals, we have asked GVGO Out-of-Province member Robert (Bob) Liggett how he grew his 1524.5# monster pumpkin. It’s now ranked as the 7th largest pumpkin ever grown. We’d like to thank Bob for all his help with the article & for sharing his ideas & techniques with our membership. Take care Bob & good luck this season. Can you tell us what your spring prep was on the same plot? For the .1 acre added 40 lb. bag of gypsum, 50 lb. Rich Earth,Grubex 11/2 normal rate; (Subdue, Clearys 3336, M Roots at recommended rate). Can you give us the results of your soil test? PH – 6.7, Organic Matter – 5.5%, Phos – 157 ppm, K – 483 ppm, Mag – 355 ppm, Calcium 1950 ppm, Base Saturation is: K- 8.2%, Mag – 19.5%, Cal – 64.4%, H – 7.9%. Micro nutrients are: Sulfur – 17 ppm, Zinc – 13.7 ppm, Maneganese – 4.7 ppm, Iron – 34 ppm, Copper – 2.3 ppm, Boron – 1.5 ppm. Did you use Mycorrhizal Fungi &/or Humic Acid on that plant? If so, How much & how often? What seed grew your monster pumpkin? The 664.5 Liggett 04 Can you describe in detail the fall prep you did on the plot that grew your 1524# pumpkin? Chisel plowed .1 acre patch, which had been seeded with lawn seed (blue grass, rye, etc.) two years prior. Added 3-inch layer of fresh shredded maple leaves and 5 cubic yards of 2 month old cow manure. Dissolved 11/2 gallon of molasses in warm water and applied by water can over patch. Mixing rate 1-pint molasses in 10 quarts water. Do you practice a till or notill method of preparing the soil in your patch? Till method Usedabout 2 lbs. per plant of Holland's BioEndo Mycorrhizal Fungi, appliedin planting hole and under each leaf node when burying side vines. Used 10 pounds of Rich Earth humic acid per planting area. Associates products; ureamate,etc. What do you use for insect & disease control? Garlic Gard or Bio Repel, Merit, Warrior T Did you use Compost Teas & if so, how was it applied? Did not use any teas or soups. What was your weather like & how much water per plant per week did you feed it? The dry weather permitted prescription watering by drip tape of an inch of water per week delivereddailyover the an extended time most of August and September over the entire .1 acre patch. Is there anything different that you’d like to try in 2008? Four plants only this year so I canspend a little less time in the patch and have more time to care for each plant when they need it. Do you have any tips or thoughts that would help our members break through the 1300# mark or grow a new PB? How far was the pumpkin from the base of the plant? 10 feet What vine pattern did you use, the Christmas tree or something different? Starts as a Christmas tree but ends up as a rectangle when trimming is finished. Do not plant back to back. What was your fertilization program & how were they applied? Used Agro K from start to finish minus the cow manure brew. Used soil test recommendations. Used some of the Widmer & I believe if you find a plantthat does well in your soil then use it as the mother plant and addpollen from proven mothers ie; Calai, Bobier, Eaton,Beachy, Rose, Knauss, Pukos, Wallace, etc. in your own patch and the following year you have a good chance togrow the new world recordin your patch from the seed you developed. Thanks Bob! 15 Pesticides 101 By John Vincent It won’t be long until we start to see our old adversaries, the Cucumber Beetle, the Squash Bug (Stink Bug) and the Squash Vine Borer (SVB). Many of us take a vow each spring to try to reduce the use of chemical pesticides in an attempt to be more environmentally responsible. But soon, we have an infestation of one of these critters and we must find control methods, or face dismal results at the weigh o! In this article I will discuss the use of chemical control of insects and fungal infection and will touch on some of the organic alternatives. It should be kept in mind that just because a thing is deemed ‘organic’ does not mean it is any safer. In fact some modern pesticides are very safe not only to humans but also to the environment. Always keep in mind the following quote "All things are poison and nothing is without poison; only the dose makes that a thing is not poison." (Paracelsus) A Swiss physician, Known as the father of toxicology. (1493 - 1541) Unfortunately in Canada, as growers of a highly specialized “crop”, we suer somewhat from a lack of products that will control these pests. Our US brethren have a far wider arsenal of compounds available to them, many of which are available over the counter. In Canada, our war chest is smaller for many reasons. The main one is economic. Chemical manufacturers are about making money. In order to license a product for sale, they have to spend millions of dollars, doing testing and studies to prove that the product has ecacy (that it works) and that it is safe to public health. The price of a pesticide in the market place has nothing to do with what it costs to make, but rather what retail price will the market bare. Many products licensed in the US are either not available at all in Canada or may be available but not registered on the same crops. Quite often this is because the market is just too small in Canada for the manufacturer to spend the necessary dollars to register the product. They would never be able to sell enough products to recuperate their investment. Another confusing situation are trade names. Often products registered in the US are available in Canada, but under dierent trade or common names. Most pesticides available for sale in Canada require a pesticide license to purchase. To obtain a license you must be a “grower” as defined by the Ministry of the Environment. You are a grower (farmer) if you: 1. Use land for agricultural or forestry production, AND 2. That land is classified as farmlands property under the Ontario Assessment Act. OR that land is not classified as farmlands property under the Ontario Assessment Act but you are involved in the application of pesticides for the purpose of agricultural or forestry production. The agricultural or forestry commodity being produced is for market and not solely for consumption by you or by members of your household. The agricultural or forestry production is not done as a hobby or for recreational purposes. You may own, rent, lease or share crop the farm land you use or may be employed on the farm land. To become a licensed Grower, you must: 1. Attend a one day Grower Pesticide Safety Course AND 2. Successfully complete the Grower Pesticide Safety Course AND 3. Be at least 16 years of age AND 4. Meet the above definition of a grower. Once you obtain your license you can purchase any pesticide licensed in Canada and scheduled in Ontario. The next challenge you may encounter is package size. Some products that work very well on pumpkins come in package sizes impractical for our purposes. Case in point is the insecticide ‘Matador’. Matador in the US is sold under the trade name ‘Warrior T’. This is a very eective 16 insecticide that is registered on pumpkins in both countries. Unfortunately, it only comes in a 3.785L (1 US gal) jug that costs $651. Chemical Families Insecticides and fungicides are divided into chemical families or groups by mode of action that is “the way they kill the specific pest.” Insects and fungi have the ability to build up resistance over time to compounds we apply to try to control them. For this reason, it is very important to not use the same compounds over and over again. Rotation between products and especially between chemical families is extremely important to manage resistance. Insect control Growing competitive Atlantic giant pumpkins requires controlling the insects. Cucumber beetle are the most common problem in Southern Ontario. In addition to causing direct plant injury by adult feeding and occasional damage to roots by larval feeding, the striped cucumber beetle is the most important as a vector of plant diseases, and in particular bacterial wilt. Fusarium wilt and squash mosaic virus can also be spread by these critters. Control is fairly easing using over the counter insecticides like Sevin or Ambush. Restricted products like Matador or Admire also work very well. Other insects of importance are Squash bug and Squash Vine Borer (SVB). Squash Bugs are also fairly easy to control with any of the above products. SVB on the other hand can be particularly hard to control. The only product available in Canada today, over the counter that will control these pests is Ambush. If you live in an active SVB area, your best course of action is to start regular applications of Ambush around mid June and continue until late July. Admire which is sold in the US as Merit, also works very well on SVB. Merit is available in Canada as a granular material and is registered only in turf for control of white grubs. Merit, applied to the soil at the white grub rate in early to mid June will give you eective control of SVB for the season. Merit is systemic, which means that it is taken up by the plants root system and moves threw all parts of the plant. What this means is that for the insect to get a lethal dose it must take a bite of the plant. Admire (Merit) also provides aective control of the other common insects, but you run the risk of your plant becoming infected with a disease, before the insect dies. For this reason it is a good idea if you are using a soil application of Merit, to also use a foliar treatment of another product at the same time. Ambush or Matador are the products of choice here as they broad spectrum and last up to up to two weeks. I reapply alternate insecticides on a weekly basis starting in mid June or as soon as I see the first cucumber beetle. Some growers have been able to achieve excellent insect control with Neem Oil. Neem oil is a natural extract from the fruits and seeds of the Neem tree. It is known to control a wide range of insects as well as suppress several diseases including powdery mildew. One thing we must always be conscious of are the beneficial, such as lady bugs, ground beetles and honey bees. Many chemical pesticides also kill beneficial insects. Neem oil is not known to be harmful to Bees or Lady Bugs. Another insect worth mentioning is the aphid. Aphids are very small almost microscopic insects that do not over winter in Ontario. Rather they hitch a ride on the jet stream coming up from the south. Aphids also can cause serious damage to the plants buy sucking the juice out of the leaves. But more importantly, they are the vector for the mosaic viruses, both cucumber and watermelon. Control can be achieved easily with Ambush, Matador or Neem oil; however we still run the risk of disease infection. In this case, an oz of prevention is worth a pound of cure! Some growers are having some success using Garlic juice as a repellent. There is a product sold in the US called Garlic Barrier. The same product is sold in Canada called Mosquito Barrier. Fungal Controls Cucurbits and in particular, Cucurbita Maxima are susceptible to a range of leaf disease especially Powdery Mildew (PM). There is an old 17 saying in the horticultural world, “when it rains, it spores”! Powdery Mildew is a fungal disease that reproduces by means of spores, which are basically the seeds of the fungus. These are spread by wind. Conditions of high humidity, wet, raining and warm conditions are perfect breeding grounds for PM. By the time you reach mid June and the humidity level starts to clime, you need to pay attention to preventing powdery mildew from getting a foot hold on your plants. Once it is established, it can be extremely dicult to get rid of and can do a lot of irreparable damage in a short period of time. There are a few chemical products available over the counter to control PM here in Ontario. Funginex Rose fungicide is very eective in controlling PM on pumpkins. The product is systemic, which means that you can spray the tops of the leaves and it will move through the plant giving you eective control. Sulfur powder and copper sprays will also work well not only as preventatives but can stop PM in its tracks if an outbreak occurs. Both sulfur and copper sprays can be very harsh on the leaves. Care must be taken not to over apply or to spray in the heat of the day. The medicine cabinet is much larger if you have a license. Products like Cabrio (Headline) and Quadris both provide excellent control while boosting the plants own immune system. These products are both in the strobilurin family. They work by preventing infection. They are not true systemic, but are translaminar, which means they move from the top of the leaf down threw the leaf. Unfortunately these products have a high incidence of resistance. You may have heard US growers refer to a product called Daconil. This product is available in Canada under the trade name Bravo. This is a very old chemistry, but is still very eective in controlling PM especially when used in rotation with a Stroilurin. Another product that works very well on PM in Pumpkin is called Nova. This is a totally dierent family then the other products I mentioned and is a true systemic, moving completely threw the plant. Unfortunately this product is only registered in Canada for use in Apples. The active ingredient is registered in several other countries for use in pumpkin. It is sold in the US under the trade name Eagle. Organic remedies include Milk, applied at a 10% dilution rate along with Baking soda at 1 TBS per gal. This mixture works by lowering the pH on the leaf surface eectively preventing infection. The down side to this is that it must be reapplied every 5 days or so and more often if it rains o. As mentioned in the section on insect control, Neem Oil also helps to control PM. Fungicidal Effects on Mycorrhizae When using mycorrhizal fungi inoculants, it is important to consider what eect your fungicide treatments will have. It would make no sense to inoculate with mycorrhizal fungi, only to kill them with fungicide application. As a general rule foliar application of non-systemic fungicides has very little impact on mycorrhizal fungi, which reside on the roots. Even though some fungicide will reach the soil, the amount reaching the root zone is usually too low to have a significant, long-term eect on mycorrhizal fungi. Foliar or soil application of systemic fungicides can lead to accumulation of fungicide in the root tissue having a negative impact on mycorrhizal fungi. Roots of treated plants are not susceptible to colonization by mycorrhizal fungi for up to 3 weeks after systemic fungicide treatment. No fungicide eradicates mycorrhizae; they only decrease development for a short time after application. It is generally accepted that if the roots are well colonized prior to beginning a treatment schedule, there will be very little eect on the mycorrhizae. Surfactants Most pesticides are a lot more eective when applied using a surfactant. Surfactants are basically soaps. What they do is make the water “wetter”, by breaking down the surface tension of the water droplets, allowing them to lie flat on the leaf surface, increasing there 18 absorption rate. Think of the leaf surface like the freshly waxed hood of your car. When you spray water on it, the water beads up and rolls o. This is caused by surface tension on the water droplets. The surface of leaves also have a waxing coating, the plant produces to protect itself from elements. Some surfactants also act as a solvent on the leaves waxy cuticle. Many pesticides are made already containing a surfactant. You need to be very careful adding additional surfactant as you can easily burn the leaves if the material is too aggressive. Neem oil in particular works much better when used with a surfactant. Most hydroponics stores carry surfactants suitable for our purposes. Water Both insecticides and fungicides are susceptible to water pH and water hardness. High pH and hard water can breakdown the active ingredients sometimes in a manner of minutes. Acidifying agents like vinegar or citric acid can be eectively added to lower the pH of the spray water and can help improve the eectiveness of the material. The exception to this is copper or sulfur based fungicides. You should not acidify the water when applying these materials. Vinegar at the rate of 1 TBS per gal of water will eectively lower high pH water down into the range of pH5. Always use soft water if possible for spraying of pesticides. If you don’t have a water softener, rain water works well. It is naturally soft and usually low pH. Environmental Factors Most pesticides are best applied when going into the cool of the day, meaning late afternoon or evening. Not only does this reduce the chance of injury to the plants, but it will also minimize injury to benificials such as bees. If the weather is extremely hot, spraying should be avoided all together. Fungicides are best applied several hours prior to a rain event. Exceptions to this are contact materials like copper or sulfur based sprays and of course milk and baking soda. Wind should also be considered. Applying pesticides in the wind will reduce the amount of material reaching your plants and could also send the material to somewhere you don’t want it. Safety No discussion on pesticides would be complete without a discussion on safety. Because we are working right out amongst our vines we run the risk of high exposures to these pesticides. Always wear protective gloves (latex or nutrile) when measuring and mixing products. Wear long sleeved shirts and long pants or coveralls when spraying. Rubber boots are best. Do not wear leather boots or shoes when spraying. After you are done spraying always wash the close you were wearing immediately in a separate load. Wash your hands well with soap before eating, drinking or smoking. If possible take a shower and wash your hair. considered especially if using some of the more aggressive pesticides. If you are using a mist blower, a good respirator is a necessity. Many pesticides have a minimum reentry period. This means that you should not go back in the patch for several hours after application. In most cases if you spray in the evening, you are ok to wait until the following morning. Remember, always read the label before applying any pesticide product. The Provincial Pesticide Ban Eective next spring, all cosmetic pesticides will be banned here in Ontario. This includes the entire over the counter products we currently use including: Ambush, Sevin, and funginex. I recently discuss this with another grower who does not use any of these materials. His comment was that it is our right to choose if we want to use these products or not. He chooses no! I agree totally with his view. We should have a choice. The government in their wisdom has caved in to public pressure and banned products deemed safe by the Canadian government as well as the regulatory bodies of many other countries. This is a free country, but somehow I feel just a little less free than I did! A respirator may seem like an extreme, but should be 19 The GVGO is proud to announce the beginning of a Special Fundraising Raffle with ALL proceeds being donated to the Cancer Society in memory of Howard Dill & the many other AG growers who have been affected by this terrible disease. The raffle will start July 1st & run until August 31st. 1st-3rd prizes will be signed & numbered, special limited (only 15) edition prints of the painting “Great Beginnings” by Elly Wilson. The Pumpkin King, Howard Dill, has also signed these prints. the print is of the Dill original homestead in Windsor, NS. Because the prints are being raffled unframed, ticket prices will be a reasonable price at: $2 each, 6 for $10, 12 for $20. We hope that you’ll support this very worthy cause. Please send cheque or money order to: GVGO 4376 Hwy 35 Cameron, Ontario, Canada KOM 1G0 to use PayPal, contact Kirk Chenier at [email protected] Great Beginnings By Elly Wilson For those of you who would like to purchase a signed & numbered limited edition (1 of 85) print, please contact the GVGO at: [email protected] or by phone: 705-887-4835. There is only a limited supply left, so order early. Unframed prints are $40 + $10 shipping & handling. These prints are signed by the artist, Elly Wilson, but not by Howard Dill 20 GVGO HATS & T-SHIRTS The GVGO is now offering this opportunity to purchase authentic GVGO hats & t-shirts. The price of either item is $15+ shipping. All products will be shipped out using Canada Post Express Mail. If you have any questions please contact: Kirk Chenier at: [email protected] & he’ll help you out! The Hats are a light beige color, with a black peak. They have the GVGO logo embroidered on the front & the size can be adjusted. The T-Shirts come in sizes L to XXXL. They only come in the color white & have our logo on the front. Contact Kirk for the availability of your size. GVGO Products Mail To: GVGO 4376 Hwy 35 N Cameron, ON Canada K0M 1G0 #___ Hats @ $15 each=____ #___ T-Shirts @ $15 each=____ Size of T-shirt L XL XXL XXXL (circle one) Total $_________ 21 NEW GVGO CLOTHING Grow your pumpkin in style this year! GVGO spring/fall beige jacket. Front left chest has GVGO logo, right chest has your full name & the back has the letters GVGO all embroidered & sewn across it. Costs are @ $55 plus shipping to your address. Special Order - will take 3-5 weeks to arrive. GVGO Golf Shirts: Men-grey, Women-yellow. Front left chest has GVGO logo, right chest has your full name. All embroidered on. Costs are @ $37, plus shipping. Special Order - will take 3-5 weeks to arrive. 22 Frost the Deadly Encounter By Russ Landry Wikipedia defines “FROST” as a solid deposition of water vapor from saturated air. It is formed when solid surfaces are cooled to below the dew point of the adjacent air.” Ah, but the gardener simply knows it just got too darn cold for the plants. Looking further into the definition it is clear that frost is ice and nothing more than that. However as with all things in nature there are ways in which the gardener can protect tender plants from this icy damage. Firstly let’s take a close look at exactly what happens to plants when they are exposed to frost. The types we like to grow competitively Tomatoes, Pumpkins, Long Gourds and Watermelon are not frost hardy at all. Thee plants will die if subjected to ice forming low temperatures upon their leaf tissues. There are some conditions in which these types of plants can survive cooling air. Plant leaf cells are damaged by sharp ice crystals formed on the leaves. In night conditions with low dew points frost does not usually form and thus in cooling below 0*C many plants can withstand the chilling injury. The leaf and thus in cooling below 0*C many plants can withstand the chilling injury. The leaf tissue remains in sort of a super cooled state not aected or injured as the ice crystals have done no damage. There are also certain chemical concoctions that can enhance survivability to frost injury but these are not the focus of this article. There are some points the gardener can consider in order to help his progeny survive the nights chilling air. Beyond and or inside the sheltering aects of the hoop house or cold frames frost can often occur. Is it important to consider that usually the coldest air is always at ground level. Movement of this air upward can prevent frost injury by drawing in warming air from aloft. Open air heating works in much the same way. We have all seen farmers rush about in winter protecting citrus crops in Florida from frost. They light open pot fires to create convective air movement and keep the ground air warmer. Fans blowing upwards do much the same job. Water sprayed on crops carries with it latent heat and prevents frost from forming on crops. I have used this tactic several times on my flower gardens over the years to protect showy early planted annual flowers. Weather plays such an important role and with frost the conditions must be just right for ice crystals to form. Windy conditions often prevent frost formation by raising ground temperatures as the movement of the coolest ground air is replaced with warmer air aloft. Clouds on cool nights are really the gardener’s best friend. They prevent radiation of warm air from surfaces and help to trap warmer air into the atmosphere much like a blanket. Temperature readings are another very important factor. As the thermometer plunges nightly it is critical that the gardener be alerted that frost ice damage can occur at temperatures which often appear to be above the freezing point. This is caused by temperature inversions that concentrate the coldest air near the ground. The damaging time occurs most often near or just after sunrise. The suns warming rays begin to heat the upper atmosphere and further invert the cold air down to the ground. On the evening of May 29th a wide spread Central and Southern Ontario frost occurred beginning at around 2am. I was up that morning checking the temperatures every 15 minutes or so. To my horrors I was startled to see the temperature at 1.5*C, need less to say I sprang into action with hot water bottles and covering shelters. Alas the damage was done. The temperatures out in the garden a mere 200 feet away were already in the frost forming range. My temperature sensor is placed 3 feet above the ground and 5 feet from the house. This as I though for years was pretty accurate. However when trying to determine if frost will form I learned the most valuable lesson of all. It is far easier to cover and protect at dusk then run, heat and ventilate at dawn thus risking your plants to the deadly encounter of frost. 23 Grower Profile By Phil Joynson Editor Note: Fred Hain was supposed to be this month’s feature grower but we didn’t receive his answers to our questions by press time. Rumour has it that Fred’s wife Dorothy knocked the ladder over while Fred was on his sunflower/tall corn tower. Fred is now stuck 20 feet in the air and is living on a diet of bananas that Dorothy tosses to him daily. Dorothy will let him down as soon as Fred promises to dig up the tank he has buried in the back yard. Good-luck Fred. A man has to do what a man has to do. Since it’s an emergency situation, I’m forced to interview myself for the “grower profile” I met myself for this following interview in front of the computer in my basement where I had a short chat with myself. (This happens more than I like to admit) (for this article bold text is me & regular text is myself) Do you have a family? Yes. I have a wife (Kathy), two kids (Emma 17 and Eric 15) and also two dogs. Two of the above individuals enjoy ear rubs and rolling around in dead things but I won’t say which ones so as not to embarrass them. What’s your Occupation? I’m an autoworker at GM (for now) How many years have you been growing giant pumpkins and what got you started growing? I’ve been growing for 12 years now but only about 9 seriously. My wife forced me out of suburbia and into a rural type area with an acre of land. I noticed the people across the street had a small AG pumpkin that fall and they gave me seeds from that pumpkin. It’s been a slow steady decline into madness ever since. What is your favourite seed to grow? What is your favourite seed to grow from your own stock? What is the largest pumpkin that you’ve grown and on which seed did you grow it on? Do you think it’s better to have a large plant (over 600 sq. ft.) or a smaller plant (under 600 sq. ft) to grow a large pumpkin and what is your preference? Ah... that’s a sore spot. The biggest pumpkin I ever got to a weigh-o was 988 lbs, but I’ve had a few bigger. That pumpkin was grown o the 1370 Rose. Does anyone else in your family grow giant pumpkins? No. The kids can’t mention the word pumpkin without placing the word “stupid” in front of it. My wife wishes I had a less expensive hobby like taking hard drugs or blowing my wages at the race track. Kathy does like the social aspect of the hobby but seldom gets her hands dirty until loading time. Do you grow any other giant vegetables besides pumpkin and if so what are they? I have long gourds, watermelons, cabbages and a marrow this year. I hope to be a marrow (seed) donor this year. I used to make fun of guys who grew these sort of things but it sure is a lot less work than pumpkins are and fun too. I love the 1370 Rose. It produces a very large beautiful pumpkin with a large trouble free plant. I really haven’t had much luck with my own seed stock despite some pretty good crosses. I’ll keep trying my own until I get something big. I think it’s better to go larger. I plant on going with 700+ sq. ft. plants this year. It has a lot to do with time lines though. I want to terminate vines at a certain date I have in my mind but I know that you have to be flexible if you have a late fruit set. I also tend to lose a lot of leaves over the season and it’s nice to have extra leaves. Do you use mostly commercial fertilizers or you more of an organic gardener or both? I don’t plan on using any commercial fertilizers on anything but the cabbages this year. That’s one of the things that really seems to have changed over the years in the hobby. When I started the rule of thumb was twice as much, twice as often the recommended amount on the box your fertilizer came in. Now the logic seems to be “worry about your soil and micro cultures and the plant will take care of itself.” it’s just going to be home brewed organic teas. 24 Speaking of brews....would you like a beer? No thanks. I’m driving later. Suit yourself. Do you mind if I have another? Go ahead but don’t come crying to me if we end up with a hangover tomorrow morning. Are there any tips of suggestions that you could provide to our members that would help them reach their goals? Probably to stop rationalizing short comings. If you know there’s something that’s not right in your patch, fix it. You can’t wait for luck to strike and you produce a big one with an imbalanced soil or too much shade or not enough eort being put into the patch. I also suggest trying out a few new ides each year. Go on the clubs patch tours and steal ideas and try out the better techniques. There’s always something you can improve on. water. It may have been why I had Dill ring problems in previous years. I also am using a dibble stick, spraying humic acid mixed with calcium, used heating cables this spring and used much larger green houses. I’m planning on not terminating my main vine and just pruning the secondary vines and just turning it to grow back towards the stump. I’ve also turned things around so that my plant will be wider than it is long. The thought there is to get the vines doing most of the work (those next to the fruit) longer and with more rooting than the other way. You’ve got to keep trying new things. What seeds made it into your patch this year? I’ve got a 1370 Rose, 947 Hunt, 1231 Pukos and a 1462 Gibson. For watermelons I’ve got a 207 Donkers and a 207 Hunt. Long gourds are a 125 and a 99 Urena and two 111 Joynson. Now that the 1600-pound barrier has ben broken, what do you think the limit is? What do you see in the future for the GVGO? 2346 pounds 4 ounces exactly. When we started this club in the lobby of the Sheraton Hotel about 5 years ago, I figured we’d get maybe 50 members and it would be prtty much be a social thing more than anything. I nominated my friend Phil Hunt to be president as a bit of a joke. You know...like voting for the girl with the moustache to be Prom Queen. Hee Hee. Well imagine my surprise when he didn’t even flinch and we really couldn’t have picked a better guy. This club has become one of the biggest and best anywhere with members all over the world. The problem is that the club is supported by so That’s a pretty silly answer. It’s a pretty silly question. Is there anything different you’re going to try this year? Oh boy. Where to start? I suppose the big one is in my methods of watering. I use buried sprinkler hoses. I used to just hook a barrel up to one end but his year I put “T” joints at every hose connection and ran it back to a manifold so that every section of hose has access to the main water hose. It should make for a more even distribution of few legs and not much of a base. It’s the same few 4 or 5 guys doing 95% of the work. If we’re to last, we need a far bigger support base. Remember what happened to the Ottawa valley group. If you enjoy the club, lend a hand once in a while. Do you have any other hobbies other than pumpkin growing? Well I’m supposed to but I don’t have a lot of time with teenagers and a full time job and Mr. Hunt keeps me pretty busy. I’ve been collecting Lionel train stu the last 10 years or so and I was supposed to be working on my lay out during the winter but it always seems to be covered in drying pumpkin seeds or I’m doing something pumpkin related. I do make time for reading and I love British comedies on the telly. Lisa Note: I am still laughing at this editions “Grower’s Profile”. Phil did a great job on this one!! In each Grower’s Vine we hand out a prize to one of our writers. This Grower’s Vine we are going to give out two. The first will go to Matt DeBacco for his very informative article. The second is going out to our Editor Phil for making us laugh! both will receive a gift from Port Elgin Pumkinfest! 25 Why Use Sugary Supplements By matt LeBannister, Maximum Yield USA Edition Nov/Dec 2007 PEOPLE FEED THEIR PLANTS SUGARS all the time without knowing it and not always understanding why. You give your sweetheart a bouquet of roses for Valentine’s Day and before they are put into the vase, sugar is added to the water to extend their bloom. Some “old school” gardeners will add molasses to their nutrient solution during the flowering period. Actually, just by adding fulvic acid, and humic acid, to your nutrient mix you are giving your plants the building blocks for sugars. Most growers do not even know that there is a meter, called a Brix meter, that is used to measure the level of sugars in the leaves of plants. It is generally understood that the higher the level of sugars within a plant’s tissue, the healthier the plant is and the better the yield will be. Knowing this, the question should not be, “Why add a carbohydrate supplement to my nutrient solution?” but simply, “Why haven’t I added one already?” To understand why you should give your plants one of the sugary supplements on the market, you should become a little more familiar with the way plants produce and use sugars. Almost all plants use sugars as their main source of fuel. They transport these sugars along with water and other elements throughout their systems, either for food or to create amino acids for biosynthesis to fuel cellular respiration. Maple trees are a great example of how plants use sugars. Their sugary sap is famous at breakfast tables worldwide, but that sap is really the food the maple tree has begun to store to survive the winter to come. Most plants are photoautotrophs, which means that they synthesize their own food directly from inorganic compounds using photons, the energy from light. They do this using a process called photosynthesis. Photosynthesis comes from the Greek word “photo,” meaning light, and “synthesis,” meaning to put together. The inorganic compounds are carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O), and the energy source is sunlight. The end products include glucose, a simple sugar, and oxygen (O2). Then, through a process called carbon fixation, ATP (adenosine triphosphate), AND? A highenergy molecule CO2 (carbon dioxide) are used to create sugars. Some sugars produced, such as glucose, are simple sugars or monosaccharides. They are easily broken down by the plant and are generally used for energy. Other sugars produced, such as cellulose, are complex sugars or polysaccharides. Polysaccharides consist of a chain of two or more sugars and are usually used for lipid and amino acid biosynthesis. Polysaccharides are also used as a fuel in cellular respiration. Cellulose specifically is used as the building material for all green plants. It is the main component of all green plant cell walls. Through the examination of the process of photosynthesis, we learn just how important the sugars produced through this process are. The sugars and starches are vital to the plant. They are essential for cellular preparation, to maintain the plants metabolism and vigor. The sugars are even the building blocks that keep the very cells of the plant together. Now it is understood that plants have a great big “sweet tooth” and are specialists at making the sugars they need. So why then should we be feeding them more on top of all this? Simply put, flowering plants are burning these carbs trying to make large fruit or vegetables, or big beautiful blooms, faster than a marathon runner trying to win a race. Not to mention that the process of photosynthesis, which produces the sugars, itself takes a lot of energy. By adding one of the organic carbohydrate supplements to your nutrient solution the carbohydrates that have been allocated to the flowering process will be replenished more easily. This will save your plant the energy it would need to create those sugars itself, and your plant can focus more of its energy on the flowering process. Also, many beneficial bacteria and fungi (aka carbon-fixing bacterial fungi) will live on the sugars and will break down the sugars for the plant. This, again, allows the plant to use energy usually spent breaking down sugars for other processes. The more beneficial bacteria and fungi, the easier nutrients are 26 absorbed by the roots. All this leads to improved flowering and overall health of the plants. When choosing the supplement for your plants remember the old saying, “You are what you eat.” The same goes for your plants. Look for something organic because organic sugars will improve flavor and smell better than anything that inorganic. There are also some sugars that are more important to your plants than others. Xylose and arabinose are two of those sugars. Both are sugars naturally produced by plants. They are also monosac-charides, which means they are simple sugars and, therefore, used more easily by the plant. Glucose should be the main ingredient of the product because it is the main product of photosynthesis. Glucose is a monosaccharide that is used for energy and for starting cellular respiration in the plant. The name “glucose” comes from the Greek word “glykys,” which means sweet, with the su x “ose,” which denotes that it is a carbohydrate. Glucose is critical in the production of proteins and in lipid metabolism. Glucose is also used as a precursor for the synthesis of several important substances, such as starch and cellulose. Starch is a way in which plants store energy and cellulose makes up most of the structural parts of plants. Fructose is also a monosaccharide and is a main component of most tree fruit, berries, and melons. It is the sweetest naturally occurring sugar and is twice as sweet as the disaccharide sucrose, which consists of glucose and fructose bonded together. The disaccharide maltose is also an important sugar because enzymes break it down into two glucose molecules. All of the above sugars are produced naturally by plants. By adding a supplement containing these simple and complex sugars to a well-balanced nutrient, a plant will increase the levels of sugars in the leaves and throughout the plant. This will let the plant use its energy more eciently, allowing more energy to be focused on producing large fruit and bigger blooms. These sugars will also improve the taste of the end product while giving fuel to beneficial bacteria and fungi. Using sugar supplements with carbon-based fulvic acid and humic acid bring great benefits to your plants with no downside. Knowing this and how the plants produce and use these sugars makes using them simply great growing technique. Matt LeBannister is thrilled to be the newest writer for Maximum Yield Magazine. He is 22 years old and for over 2 years has worked at Homegrown Hydroponics. Matt manages the retail store at Homegrown’s head oce in Toronto and as of late has been traveling the Trade Show circuit as their resident expert. “I hope to make a big splash in the indoor gardening industry through Homegrown and Maximum Yield. You never know how this business will grow”. Matt extends his services to you, the Maximum Yield reader, via 1-800-INFO-GRO. Port Elgin Pumpkinfest needs your help! With the help from a grant program sponsored by Ontario Tourism, we have secured the funds necessary to put together an interactive educational display on how to grow these monsters. The new area “Patches Pumpkin Patch” will be unveiled at Pumpkinfest 2008 and will be available for traveling appearances after that time. Members of the GVGO will be welcome to utilize the new portable display in their own communities through out the year. We are looking for some help in getting this designed. We are in need of some one to make a fiberglass pumpkin (after the weigh off season as we will use a real one for the festival), as well as some ideas on where to get the other components produced (seeds, plants, etc.). We want the area to show each stage of the growing process, as well as be very portable so it can travel easily. We have funds available to make this entire area, and hope that upon completion it will become a great asset to our pumpkin community. Anyone with ideas or questions can contact me (Lisa Ir win) by email [email protected] or by phone 1-800-387-3456. 27 A Pseudo Statistical Analysis of Plant Sizes and # of Pumpkin Lobes By Greg Hospon Each year there is a lot of discussion regarding two key issues that we all face as giant pumpkin growers: 1st – How big should my pumpkin plant be? 2nd – Should I set a 4 lobe or 5 lobe pumpkin 4-lobe female With the vast wealth of information that the AGGC site provides I set out to gather data and conduct a statistical analysis of these two questions and maybe provide us pumpkin growers some much needed answers. As a starting point, I made the assumption that as giant pumpkin growers, our goal is to produce the biggest pumpkin possible and become a member of the “Heavy Hitters” club. An ad-hoc search of posts on bigpumpkins.com shows a general agreement that the current standard to be considered a heavy hitter is 1200 pounds. And it is from this base number of 1200 pounds or greater that I focused my research around. Question 1: HOW BIG SHOULD MY PUMPKIN PLANT BE? To answer this question I searched the AGGC database and complied a list of all pumpkins grown 1200 pounds or greater and for which there was also data on the square footage of the plant that the pumpkin was grown on. 169 such pumpkins were found meeting this criterion. Adding all their square footage together and dividing by 169 gives us an average square footage of 690 sq/ft per plant. Thus we can say with certainty, that for all pumpkins ever grown over 1200 pounds, the average size of the pumpkin plant they were grown on, was 690 square feet. As a general growing practice, this would be a good number to strive for when growing our pumpkin plant. BUT, as they say, there is more to the story then that. And we find that by answering question number 2. Question 2: WHICH IS BETTER, A 4 LOBE OR 5 LOBE PUMPKIN? There is never any lack of debate when it comes to this question, which is also extended to 3 lobe and 6 lobe pumpkins. However, data for 6 lobes and 3 lobes is skimpy and therefore not considered in this analysis. As a starting point, we need to determine the average weight of all pumpkins grown 1200 pounds or greater and who had 4 lobes. Then we need to turn around and do the very same thing for 5 lobe pumpkins. There are 52, 4-lobed pumpkins which account for 31% of all pumpkins grown 1200 pounds or greater. These 52, 4-lobed pumpkins have and average weight of 1446 lbs. There are 103, 5-lobed pumpkins which account for 60% of all pumpkins grown 1200 lbs or greater. These 103, 5-lobed pumpkins have and average weight of 1425 pounds. The remaining 9% of pumpkins had no data listed for them or were six lobed pumpkins. So, intuitively we can look at these results and determine that 4 lobe pumpkins as a general rule appear to have an average weight that is 21 pounds (2%) higher then a 5-lobe pumpkin. That dierence is not great, but it could be enough to win you the weigh o. However, this is a good example of how sometimes statistics can mislead our conclusions. There is a hidden factor at play here. When we look at a third calculation, that takes into account the average square footage of a 4-lobed pumpkin plant and the average square footage of a 5-lobed pumpkin plant, we find something revealing: Of the 52 4-lobed pumpkins plants grown 1200 pounds or greater, the average square feet of plant that they were grown on is 725 sq/ft. Of the 103 5-lobed pumpkins plants grown 1220 pounds or greater, the average square feet of plant that they were grown on is 648 sq/ft. There is a dierence between 28 a 4-lobed plant and a 5-lobed plant of 11%. Thus, we can say that a 4-lobed pumpkin needs to be grown on a plant that is 11% larger in square footage to reach the same weight of a corresponding 5-lobed plant. A fourth calculation also sheds some light. If we take the average square feet of a 5-lobed plant (648) and a 4-lobed plant (725) respectively, and dived each by their respective average weights of 1446 and 1425 pounds it give us a yield rate. 4-lobed pumpkins on average yield 1.99 pounds of pumpkin for every square foot of plant space. 5-lobed pumpkins on average yield 2.20 pounds of pumpkins for every square foot of plant space. This means that 5-lobed pumpkins are more “ecient”, in that they yield on average 10% more pounds per square feet of plant then an equally situated 4lobed plant. CONCLUSIONS: From this research we can make the following generalizations. To grow a “heavy hitter” pumpkin of 1200 pounds or greater we should keep these principles in mind: First, The size of the pumpkin plant that is needed will depend on whether you set a 4-lobed pumpkin or a 5-lobed pumpkin, with a smaller plant being needed for a 5-lobed pumpkin (648 sq/ft) and a larger plant being needed for a 4-lobed pumpkin (725 sq/ ft). Second, a 5-lobed pumpkin is more “ecient” then their 4lobed counterparts in that 5lobed pumpkins yield 10% more pounds per square feet, or 2.20 lbs/ per sq/ft, versus 4-lobed pumpkins who yield on average 1.99 lbs/ per sq/ft. Be very careful in how you read this. It DOES NOT mean that 5lobed pumpkins are better at producing bigger pumpkins. In fact 5 of 9 pumpkins over 1500 pounds are 4-lobed pumpkins. But it DOES mean that you need a bigger plant size to grow the 4lobed pumpkin to “heavy hitter” status versus the 5-lobed pumpkin. In fact 11% square feet more plant size. I will leave the practical application of this research up to others way smarter then me. But as a starter I would say that if lack of space is a consideration, get as close to 650 square feet of plant as you can and grow a 5-lobed pumpkin if at all possible. Also, keep in mind that a smaller plant is easier to maintain, less susceptible to weather factors, less susceptible to disease and cheaper to grow. If you have any doubts about this consider the case of Bob Liggett. He has done something, which I think may be a testament to the greatest growing feats this sport has ever seen. Out of 169 pumpkins, 1200 pounds or greater, only 16 have been grown in square footage of 480 square feet or less. Bob Liggett has 4 of these pumpkins. That’s an amazing 25%. His 1353.5 pumpkin had a yield of 4.51 pounds per square foot of plant, and absolutely incredible feat! He also has a 5th pumpkin that is at 1172, just barely o the heavy hitter mark. In a quick exchange of ideas with Bob Liggett, I discovered that he has been forced to use such small plants due to environmental disease and insect factors that ravage any attempts at a bigger plant. This is exactly where this research shows a 5-lobed plant would be of advantage over a 4-lobed plant. And in fact, 4 of the 5 pumpkins grown by Bob Ligget where 5-lobed pumpkins. I hope this will help other growers. It was just a fun research project for myself to kill some time until spring gets here. If anyone has any further questions, please feel free to email me at [email protected] and I will do my best to answer them. Or post a comment here and I will respond as well. Keep in mind, I am just a hack. I have no formal training in math and statistics. I am always mindful of my favorite quote regarding statistics. It was accredited to Buddy Ryan, head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles when a reporter presented him with a bunch of statistics about why the Eagles could not win he replied “Statistics remind me of the guy who drowned in a river with and average depth of just two and a half feet.” Numbers don’t always tell the whole story. 29 Howard’s Dirt By Russ Landry What can you say about a man who grows the largest pumpkins in the world? If perhaps you happened to have no knowledge of growing vegetables and genetic plant biology the answer for most would be fairly simple. However for those more inclined to understand the intricacies of the Dills, Atlantic Giant Pumpkins (AGP) the answer swells to a topic that reaches beyond comprehension of folks who trod about their daily chores. You see it’s obvious to me that the father of The AGP, Howard Dill spawned a new revolution when for years he toiled with a few seeds in his backyard. The revolution I’m talking about is now a throng of growers that includes the best of gardeners right on down to the happy youngsters that form 4H clubs across the continent who fling the Dill seeds earthward. From, hobbyist and expeierenced and to those just wishing to grow a sizable porch decoration on October 31st, Howard Dill has decorated us all. He has for more than a generation helped us to adorn our gardens with the largest vegetable mankind can produce. So large is this throng that today from a mere humble beginning near the birthplace of Canada’s most famous “Golden Pond” and the beginnings of our beloved sport of hockey did this man create another. The sport of growing Giant Pumpkins was born right from his hands and transferred down to each of us. Pondering this it is easy to wander a pathway down to a time past all of the web sites, the clubs, the governing bodies, the fund raisers, the conventions, the gatherings at patch tours and all of the competitions and regattas to an era when it was just Howard and his dirt. If you could close your eyes and consume the pumpkin world in a flash back you would find Mr. Howard Dill peering over the patch in wonderment at what he had created. It is truly an amazing story of how such a simple seed produced such a long time ago in Windsor, Nova Scotia, became such a success for a man of such humble quality. The never ending story begins each year at this time for most of us as we begin to dream the dream that Howard spawned so many years ago. This remarkable Canadian leaves us now with tremendous memories and seed banks full of wonderful Orange shimmering fruit. To the father of my favorite pastime, I say thanks and goodbye not with sorrow but with glee and hope of the big one to come. Tissue Testing How to, when and why By Ron Wallace re-printed from SNGPG spring Newsletter As the evolution of our hobby continues, much is now known about soil nutrient levels and what we should strive for when building a soil. On the contrary we have very little information on “in season” tissue testing. In the beginning there was not enough soil test results for our specific crop (Giant Pumpkins). Remember a soil lab bases it’s averages and recommendations on what the lab usually sees for results. The University of Massachusetts is the local lab of choice here in New England. Over time they have seen enough results from our patches that they are now better suited to give recommendations based on our crop needs. If we are going to continue with taking our hobby to the next level, it is in my opinion that we nee to obtain a larger database on tissue tests and educate ourselves on what to do with the results. Why Tissue Test? One of the questions I often hear when looking at a soil test versus a tissue test is: “I have plenty of that nutrient in my soil, so why does the tissue test indicate I have a problem?” A soil test analysis indicates the relative availability of nutrients in the soil for a corp to use. Plant tissue analysis will let us know what nutrients have been or are being absorbed by the plant. Later in this article I will show an example of the Tissue Test results from 30 our patch last year. Another question I her regarding tissue testing is “My plants look great and are right on schedule, it looks like they need nothing”. Growing vines to support your pumpkin is one thing, but that can all change when the pumpkin starts the “sink” eect on the plant. Growing 20-40 pounds a day will put undo stress on your pumpkin plant. Combine that with environmental eects and you have a good recipe for disaster. As we are well aware a weak plant can lead, to not only a smaller pumpkin, but invite disease problems as well. Ever notice that most of the problems associated with our plants/ pumpkins happen during peak growth. You can also encounter “Hidden Hunger”. This is when your plant will show no visual symptoms of a deficiency, but will have a direct outcome on the weight of your final results. After cutting, rinse the leaves thoroughly with cool tap water to remove any chemicals, fertilizers and soil particles. Then place then on clean paper, to air dry. Once dried carefully place leaves in a paper bag and send next day mail to your plant tissue-testing lab. Be careful when packaging not to contaminate the leaves with any foreign material. How and when to Sample As shown below, when comparing our 2006 and 2007 tissue test results, the glaring dierence on the results is our uptake of calcium; and to a lesser extent Magnesium (Mg) and Maganese (Mn). Samples need to be taken prior to fruit set (late June till the end of the first week in July). If there are no noticeable problems, I will take 10-20 leaves from our patch. The leaves sampled need to be the ones near the end of the growing tip of the plant (main vine). Leaf size at this stage is usually twice the size of my hand. If I noticed a plant that is lagging and showing signs of weakness, I will test that plant separately from the rest. When removing the leaves make sure you have a sharp sanitized knife. I use rubbing alcohol to sanitize between cuts. Suciency Range & results The University of Massachusetts suciency range for pumpkins is as follows: Macronutrients % M ic r onut r ie nt s ppm N 4.00-6.00 Fe 50-200 P 0.60-0.70 Mn 50-250 K 3.00-5.00 B 25-75 Ca 1.20-2.50 Cu 7-25 Mg 0.30-2.50 Zn 20-200 2006 Wallace Patch Tissue Test Results N 4.30 Fe 192 P 0.71 Mn 139 K 4.54 B 35 Ca 5.86 Cu 13 Mg 1.28 Zn 58 2007 Wallace Patch Tissue Test Results N 4.84 Fe 192 P 0.76 Mn 28 K 4.85 B 27 Ca 0.46 Cu 8 Mg 0.34 Zn 48 Knowing our soil contains about 2800 ppm on Calcium, there was a problem as to why the plant was not taking it up at a sucient level. I first thought of all the lime we had to use in 06 to correct our new soil. Could this be the reason for the 06 increased amounts of calcium and magnesium? We also have a problem in New England with low levels of manganese, so this was nothing new to me. So why such a change from 2006? In our SNGPG December newsletter I explained how we sub soiled a bit deeper in the spring of 07 than we did in 06. That extra 8-inches or so brought up some clay. Our soil base s mostly sandy loam. When you mix clay and sand together, you get cement! By the time we had noticed our soil was a bit compacted (Late May) I started the ardous task of breaking up the compacted clods using a pitch fork and inserting it into the soil at approximately 8inches and pulling backwards, breaking up any compaction. The clods were big, weighing more than 5 pounds or so. You could actually see the layer of sand and clay. The soil texture was also sticky. Not a very 31 good soil structure for nutrient recycling. I had to do this several times, to aerate the soil. After a few weeks, you could start to see the results. The breaking of the “crust” allowed the soil to aerate and break down to resemble its look and texture of 06. this compaction led to our poor calcium and nutrient movement within the vascular system of our plant. It no doubt had a big eect on our 07 results, as I feel we left some “weight on the table”. In conclusion: are the suciency ranges listed for pumpkins sucient enough for our usage? I would tend to think no. As I mentioned earlier, we are at the infancy stage of tissue testing and we simply need more results to draw a conclusion as to what is “enough”. It would have been very interesting to see results from Jutras, Young and McKie plants last year. If you decide to tissue test in 08, please feel free to send me the results at years end, at 860 Plainfield Pike, Greene, RI, 02827. Collecting this data along with the weight of your pumpkin, may reveal one more “cog in the wheel” towards 2, 000 pounds! In Canada, Stratford Agi Analysis will do a complete tissue test for $24, A & L Labs will do a complete tissue test for $32-10% GVGO discount. Stratford Agri Analysis Box 760, 1131 Erie St. Stratford, ON, N5A 6S6 519-273-4411 A&L Canada Labs 2136 JestStream Rd London, ON, N5V 3P5 519-457-2575 GVGO Member offers a 10% discount for Humic Acid in Small Consumer Quantities to all other GVGO Members A friend in Thunder Bay told me about his pumpkins. He passed on a few articles from this Newsletter and introduced me to the Giant Vegetable Growers of Ontario. I became a member this spring and I am now trying my luck with some of the seeds that came with the membership. I am a complete novice but I am looking forward to the season. can increase fertilizer eciency and research has indicated that there is an increased up-take of magnesium and calcium when plants have been irrigated with a liquid suspension of Humic substances. Here are some of the benefits of Humics. • Chelates soil nutrients • Reduces need for nitrogen fertilizers • Aids in removal of toxins from soil • Improves soil structure • Improves water holding capacity • Improves nutrient up-take • Stimulates biological activity • Solubolizes minerals • Stores major nutrients I am interested in Humic Acid and found the articles about Humic and Fulvic Acid and the references to their use very helpful and informative. I had been using Humic Acid as an aid in organic waste odour reduction and decomposition at my cabin and I became interested in Humics as a soil amendment. I found Humics were dicult to obtain in small consumer quantities so I started packaging and distributing Humics in amounts for the small grower. I am able to provide a dry soluble Humic in 100 gram, 250 gram, and 500 gram packages. I can also provide ORMI listed 6 and 12% liquid Humic concentrate in litre, 1 litre and 4 litre bottles. Liquid Fulvic is also available in the same amounts. Humic Acid is a carbon based soil amendment that can be applied with many other fertilizers. The Humic material that I am able to provide is extracted from oxidized sub-bituminous Canadian coal deposits. The subbituminous deposits have been shown to contain lower levels of ash and heavy metals and have a higher CEC than humic extracted from other Leonardite and Lignite deposits. Humic substances encourage an increased up-take of major nutrients of N.P.K. by the plants. An application of dry or liquid humic substance to the soil To produce a 6% Humic solution mix .64 lbs of dry soluble with 1 gallon of water. To produce a 12% solution mix 1.28 lbs with 1 gallon of water. Application rates vary with use and conditions but the manufacturer suggests the following: Trees Shrubs and Bedding Plants: Mix teaspoon of a 12% solution with 1 gallon of water and apply solution to plant material. Landscape and Turf: Broadcast 1 to 3 tablespoons of a 12% solution per 1000 square feet in 4 to 6 equal applications throughout the growing season 32 Established Ornamentals: Use 1 part 12% humic solution to 100 parts water every 45 to 60 days during the growing season. Apply as normal irrigation. As part of a fertilization program apply gallon of liquid humic solution to 22 lbs of fertilizer. For more information about any of these products, chemical analysis or prices please contact me at [email protected] or 1-204-880-0884. GVGO members will receive a 10% discount on any product that I am able to supply. 6. Good luck this year and I hope everyone has a successful season. 14. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 15. Rick Milliken – GVGO Member 2008 16. 93 OF THE BEST AND WORST GIANT PUMPKIN BUMPER STICKERS, T-SHIRT SLOGANS, CLASSIFIED ADS, PICK-UP LINES, JOKES AND/ OR UGPG SLOGANS 17. 18. 19. 20. Here’s a Bunch of Funnies that have been passed around on the Internet by the Pumpkin community. Thanks goes out to John Vincent for bringing them to our attention and we’d like to thank the anonymous poster that collected them all. Since I wrote at least four of them I don’t mind stealing and printing the email. ;0) Your friendly Editor 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. In no particular order: 26. 27. 28. 1. 2. 29. 3. 4. 5. My soil is better than your soil I spend all my spare time in the patch Dear get sprayer 3 ready, I just saw a squash bug outside, I’m going to suit up. I just got back the results of my soil test and I am too nervous to open it Will teach you how to grow giant pumpkin in exchange for organic matter or trailer 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. Psychiatrist: What do you see in this picture? Grower: My neighbors back lawn that could be converted into a growing space for 9 plants with 450 sq. ft. each To the Weigh Off or bust! What do you mean you are having contractions, tomorrow’s the weigh off! SMGPG (single male giant pumpkin grower) sees SF, must be able to pinch and prune, pollinate, water, fertilize, drive forklift and do other patch work as needed. Giant pumpkin grower seeks good lifting tarp with strong straps. Old Growers never die, they just go to the big weigh-off in the sky My patch is full of crap and I like it that way I used to have a lawn- now I grow Giant Pumpkins My wife colored her hair orange so I’d pay more attention to her. I’d trade my first born for a 1068 Wallace My only hobbies are growing Giant Pumpkins and ...hmm I thought there was another one. Wow honey, how long have we had 3 children, I thought we just had 2 Giant Pumpkins: this ain’t no beauty contest missy So how many plants are you going to be growing this year? How could you grow anything but giant pumpkins in your garden? Wow that would be a nice crossback Got Big, Round and Orange yet? Well what are you waiting for? If you’re not growing Giant Pumpkins then why bother Forget your fairy godmother, I’ve got a giant pumpkin in my patch right here for you Howard Dill the man who started it all Shade Cloth .... shhh it’s a secret I once had a 723 Bobier Ron Wallace 1502 lbs New World Record Powdery Mildew: do you know how to prevent it? Jack-be little’s are for wimps. Real men grow Atlantic Giant Pumpkins I’m a giant pumpkin grower....I forget what my real job is Please take your bagged leaves to my patch Twenty lbs a day...that’s nothing bub Just try to steal my pumpkin this year you rotten kids! 35. Follow me to the Utah Giant Pumpkin Weigh Off 36. I feed my babies manure because that’s what they like best 37. OM, don’t get caught in the patch with out it 38. UGPG the biggest bunch of gourds you’ll ever see in one place 39. One AG safely on the scale is worth t wo in the patch 40. Beauty & the Beast; Do you have to put my big, pretty, tall, round, orange pumpkin next to that small, ugly short, flat, white one? 41. My N, P, & K are all off the charts in the dangerously high range, how are yours? 42. What do you do with them? I grow them for fun. No really what do you do with them? 43. Psychiatrist: What so you see in this picture? Grower: A Christmas tree plant shape 44. Go big or go home 45. My Dad won first place at the weigh off and all I got was this lousy tshirt 46. Could you teach me how to pollinate some day? 47. Hagrid grows giant pumpkins, how come you don’t? 48. I’d like to let the boy scouts have it for an activity, but...um...Cinderella has it. 49. How would you like to come over to my patch and help me do some weeding? 50. Vacation, can’t we find some place to go in the off season? 51. Do you rotate them? Yes everyday I go in the patch and roll by 600 lb pumpkin over 52. UGPG: toughest bunch of growers west of the Mississippi 53. I’m looking for a 1068 Wallace or an 1104 Blair or maybe you 54. I brake for Giant Pumpkin Growers 55. Hi what’s your favorite cross? 56. OTT... the only way to measure 57. Honk if you’d like to swap seeds 58. I am a Pumpkinologist! 59. You’ve never really lived unless you’ve lived with a giant pumpkin grower 60. I love Big & Orange x Big & Orange 61. My first coach was a giant pumpkin.... 62. Tomorrows expensive hotties are free today for the SADBP 63. The B.S stops when the tail gate drops 64. My real job is growing giant pumpkins... I just do the other 9-5 thing to support it. 33 65. I know it’s early in the day, but I’m just going to move this main vine a little. 66. Wanted: Steamy date for Friday night to help me load some steamy manure 67. Sorry x open just isn’t acceptable anymore pal... but honey please take me back 68. Keep your kids off my pumpkin... it hasn’t been weighed yet 69. Pistol & Stamen = True Love ( no bee’s allowed) 70. Warning: Smith and Wesson protect my patch 71. Giant Pumpkin Growing: not just a hobby - an obsession! 72. Wanted: 12 experienced lifters 73. Squash bugs can ruin your whole season 74. The love of my life gained 40 lbs yesterday. Keep going baby! 75. Moving to a new house for a bigger patch is worth it 76. I love manure. Wanted: More manure 77. YES they are REAL pumpkins 78. Rib splitting is no laughing matter. 79. Wow look at thoses sets... who does your pollinating? 80. Compost Tea anyone? 81. Honk if you love Howard Dill 82. I’ll show you my pumpkins if you show me yours 83. psst hey buddy- yeah you- got any extra pallets I can borrow? 84. Hi neighbor how’s your back and what are you doing next Friday? 85. My wife said it’s either me or the pumpkins...every now and then I miss her 86. Looking to rent fork lift for month of October, will trade Giant Pumpkin after weigh off 87. Giant Pumpkins: Grow’em or blow’em 88. Honey I’m going outside to check on the seedlings...I’ll be back sometime after the weigh-off 89. Ask me about my wife’s giant fruit 90. Giant Pumpkins are they a vegetable or a fruit? ... the world may never know 91. Wife: Pumpkins, that’s all he thinks about. Psychiatrist: Look at this light please. Grower: hmm bright light, hey Dear...I think I’ll add grow lights to the patch this year. 92. As me about milk injecting! 93. Happiness is spending hundreds of dollars to win a $5 ribbon! GVGO PUMPKIN PATCH TOUR 2008 The growers in East Central Ontario would like to invite you all to tour our patches on Sunday August 24, 2008 1st stop, 8:30-9:00am Dave Pitura’s-Merrickville-Canada’s top grower in 2007. Dave grew 7 fruits over 1000 lbs last year. Personal best 1378.5 lbs. Hwy 401 to Brockville, exit 705 on Matiland Rd, north towards Merrickville on Cty Rd 15. Travel 29 km through the villages of Algonquin and North Agusta to Kerford Rd, turn right (East) 200m to 147 Kerford Rd, on right. 2nd stop, 11:00-11:30 am Frank Penner- Napanee- 20 year Grower, Personal Best 892 lbs From Dave Pitura's, go back down Maitland Rd to the 401 and go east, to exit 579B, hwy 41 south, through the town of Napanee, hwy 41 becomes Cty Rd 8, continue aprox 4km to Cty Rd 9 (There are t wo exits to Cty Rd 9, you want the second one). Turn right (west), travel aprox. 4km, to 9867, Cty Rd 9 on left. Watch for signs. Total Travel time approximately 2 hrs, 172km. 3rd stop, 12:00- 1:30 pm John Vincent & Brian McGill - Northport- Up and coming Growers. Patch Best 995.5* From Frank Penner, go back to Cty Rd 8 and proceed north to Cty Rd #2 (Dundas St) and turn Left. Follow through Desoronto to Hwy 49, Turn Left (South) across the bay bridge. At the base of the bridge turn right on Cty Rd 15. Continue 9km to the village of Northport. Address is 1538 Cty Rd 15 and is on the left (south side) Travel time approximately 20 minutes, 35km. Lunch will be served at the Vincent & McGill Patch 4th stop, 2:00- 2:30 pm, Arnold Vader- East Lake - Heavy Hitter and 20 year Grower. Personal Best-1193 lbs From John & Brian's, go back Cty Rd 15 to Hwy 49 and Turn Right and travel south to the town of Picton. Turn Right onto Hwy 33 (Loyalist Parkway), the main St of Picton to Lake St (Cty Rd 10) turn Left. Continue south approximately 15 km (Rd changes to Cty Rd 18 at village of Cherry Valley) to 1260 Cty RD 18. Travel time approximately 30 Minutes, 40Km. 5th stop, 3:00-3:30 pm, Jim Ives- 12 year grower, PB 679 From Arnold Vader's, continue on Cty Rd 18, It turns into Cty Rd 12, approximately 12km to Ridge rd. Turn Right 1km to 1221 Ridge Road on the Right. Travel time approximately 15 Minutes, 15Km. 6th Stop, 4:30-5:00 pm, John &Chris Lyons- Baltimore - Heavy Hitters and multiple world record holders. Patch Best 1130 lbs. Hwy 401 West to Cobourg, exit 474. Turn left at end of ramp and go North 3 km. to town of Baltimore. Turn Right at Community centre Rd. There is a Mr. Convenience store at this corner. Road makes hard right after .5 km. Follow another 2 km. to Northumberland Heights Rd. which is just past "S" curve in road. Turn right on Northumberland Height Rd. We are the first driveway on the right, #1154. END OF TOUR There will be door prizes at noon including a Howard Dill numbered print. Lunch is $5 including a beverage. We will have commemorative patch tour tshirts available for $15. Proceeds to the Wellington weigh off. Please pre-reregister with who will be attending and if you would like, your t-shirt size(s) at: [email protected] 34 THE FINAL WORD Some dates and items to remember from this Growers Vine The “Howard Dill Cancer Fundraiser” prints are up for raffle at $2 a ticket, 6 for $10. Send cheques or money orders to... GVGO 4376 HWY 35N, Cameron, ON Canada, K0M 1G0 The GVGO annual patch tour will be held in Prince Edward County (for the most part) and will be held on Sunday August 24th. Starting a 8:30 sharp. See the itinerary in this Grower’s vine issue for time table and directions. The Pembroke Giant Pumpkin weigh-off will be held at Hugili’s Blueberry Ranch on September 27th. Unloading starts at 9:00 with the weigh off starting at Noon. You can get a hold of GVGO member Brant Timm for more info. The Murillo Giant Pumpinfest will be held on Saturday Sept. 27th. See the poster in this Growers Vine for details. Port Elgin Pumpkinfest will be held October 4th & 5th and this year all growers will be able to enter in both days! The Norfolk County Fair weigh-off will be held on Oct. 5th however you’ll need to pre-register a least a week before to enter a pumpkin. Woodbridge Fair will be held Saturday October 11. Weigh-off starts at 1pm. For information and rules contact Keny Maynard @ 905-851-0690. GVGO member Frank Catapano is also on the weigh off committee and should be able to answer your questions. The Wellington Pumpkinfest will be held on Saturday October 18th. This is a GPC sanctioned event. See their web site for details and directions. The Cornerstone Weigh-Off will be held on Oct. 25th. It’s later this year and Russ is promising a fun filled family outing for all. See the GVGO club web site for details. The 1st annual Keene Pumpkin Festival will be held on the 25th of October. This is a non GPC event so you’re allowed to bring previously weighed pumpkins. See Kirk Chenier’s article in this issue for details. Don’t forget about the Royal Winter Fair held at Exhibition place in Toronto. As of press time, their web-site is pretty stale but I gather the Giant Vegetable judging will be on Saturday Nov. 8th. Pre-registration is required. Contact GVGO members Norm Craven, Marc Levy or matt Leach for further details and info. 35