Results 11 to 20 of 91
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06-08-2010, 07:09 AM #11Veteran Member
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Re: Pumpkin Crop
We planted about 400 hills last week and most of them are up. We are a few weeks late with the great weather we have had this year. This is the first year we put the hills closer together. If it works, we can double our production. Our hills are in rows that are 85" apart. Each hill is spaced 2.5 feet from the other. So they are close to each other in the row but have a ton of room between the rows. We also alternated our pumpkins and gourds... We have never mulched with straw, but i think it would be worth it!
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06-08-2010, 08:08 AM #12Member
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- Oct 2009
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- 29
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- Addison County Vermont
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- New Holland T2320
Re: Pumpkin Crop
Wow, that's a serious pumpkin patch! Love to pics as the season progresses. This is my first year with any sort of quantity, albeit just a fraction of what you have going. I figured I'd start with the very upper end of all the spacing recommendations I've ever read, and work down in the next years. I'm at 5 feet between hills, and 15 feet between rows. Yeah, I figured I'd mulch, just the hills. With just 60 hills, it was very manageable. The soil is plenty warm, and I mainly wanted some moisture retention for later on in the season.
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06-08-2010, 09:42 AM #13Veteran Member
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- JD 5203, JD 3720, JD 4110, JD 445, IH 1586, IH 886, IH 404......
Re: Pumpkin Crop
My kids are 6 and 4 and they love pumpkins. This year we plan to put some out for sale and to give the kids the money. Next year, I plan to ask them for more help in weeding. They love to plant and pick. My hope is that they will see this as a way to make money.
I hope it will also teach them the good and bad about business. They may see that all people are not honest or they may have to clean up after some kids who smash the pumpkins. All good lessons in life if it works out.
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06-08-2010, 10:10 AM #14
Re: Pumpkin Crop
I plant around 2/3rd acre of pumpkins. I now plant in rows spaced 8 feet apart and hills (2-4 plants) every 3 feet. With large rows I can easily till the weeds between the rows until the plants begin to vine. I use my Cole 12MX planter to plant the pumpkin hills. Here is a picture taken early last July.
I tilled my patch again last night and hope to plant tonight if the rain holds off.Last edited by Luremaker; 06-08-2010 at 05:44 PM.
L3130 HST, LA723 Loader, TC18 w/ Front Mount Snow Blower, 3ph Bush Hog, 2 bottom plow, 3ph Finish Mower, Befco Spreader, Chain Harrow, Box Blade, 50 Gal Sprayer, Shaver Post Driver, Dump Wagon, Grader Blade, Agric Tiller, one row Cole 12mx planter, two row JD 71 Planter, 2 row Webb Precision Vegetable Planter, 13 foot Cultipacker, Cole Fertilizer Side Dresser, 2-row Cultivator, 1-row Cultivator, 9' International Disc Harrow, Subsoiler, Middle Buster, Subframe Backhoe, Vicon Vari-Spreader.
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06-08-2010, 12:46 PM #15Member
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- Oct 2009
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- 29
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- Addison County Vermont
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- New Holland T2320
Re: Pumpkin Crop
Here's a shot of my patch, and those wide rows. So far things are looking ok. They're on to the 3rd real leaf, and healthy for the most part. About the only thing has been a pretty good hit from cucumber beetles.
I do have a few hills though, same variety, right in a row, which aren't looking great. It almost looks like a foliage disease like a mosaic or something. It might have been the two Sevin applications though for the beetles, or a combination of insect and chemical damage. What do you guys think? Am I being paranoid? Should I give them some time, or not take any chances and rip those few hills out now and replace? The rest of the patch looks good.
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06-09-2010, 08:33 AM #16Super Star Member
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- Feb 2001
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- 18,728
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- Texas - Wise County - Sunset
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- NHTC45D, NH LB75B, Ford Jubilee
Re: Pumpkin Crop
That looks like Sevin damage or water/mud splash kind of burning you get especially after fertilizer application. I would look at new leaves and see if they appear normal. If the new leaves are healthy and don't show damage, I think you are good to go without replanting.
I have one cantaloupe plant that was turning yellow just in one area near where the stem entered the ground. I thought it was too much water or the beginning of a disease. I moved the leaves around to inspect and found a huge hole in the ground where a bunny rabbit is trying to make a nest.
Everytime I fill the hole back in, the rabbit digs it out again. I've filled it three times and I guess I'll have to put a rock in there or have me some early morning target practice. I put heavy deer netting all around my garden and now I have softball sized holes all in the perimeter down next to the ground where the stinkin' little bunny is chewing its way into my garden and eating my broccoli. I guess chicken wire around the bottom is the next step.
Jim

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06-09-2010, 11:43 AM #17Super Member
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- Aug 2009
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- Beaver Creek, Northern Michigan
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- Kubota B2320
Re: Pumpkin Crop
Don't rip it out. If you are concerned, plant a sister plant right next to it.
BP
"Some chickens, some gardens and a Kubota."
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06-09-2010, 09:43 PM #18Veteran Member
- Join Date
- Jun 2005
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- MD
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- Kubota L3940 L5030 MF205-4
Re: Pumpkin Crop
I rolled a pumpkin over the hill last fall, and it lay all winter in my lower yard. This spring I pickup up the core with all the seeds, and put in at the end of my garden. I tilled in a bunch of compost, and put some extra compost in a pile right over the spot where I put the pumpkin seeds. They are growing like crazy.
L3940HSTC, QA FEL, BH92
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MF 205-4
Husqvarna YTH24V48LS (the other orange)
KK Finish Mower, KK Tiller, 6' rotary mower, Pallet forks, PHD, Blade, Carryall, cultivator, 2 wheel barrows, assorted gardening tools,
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06-21-2010, 11:45 AM #19
Re: Pumpkin Crop
Well I finally got a few pumpkin seeds in the ground last Friday (June 11) and they started to germinate on Thursday (June 17). Checked them out this morning and they seem to be doing good. I plowed new ground this year a half mile from last years patch so it should take the bugs a few days to find them. This picture was taken last night.
L3130 HST, LA723 Loader, TC18 w/ Front Mount Snow Blower, 3ph Bush Hog, 2 bottom plow, 3ph Finish Mower, Befco Spreader, Chain Harrow, Box Blade, 50 Gal Sprayer, Shaver Post Driver, Dump Wagon, Grader Blade, Agric Tiller, one row Cole 12mx planter, two row JD 71 Planter, 2 row Webb Precision Vegetable Planter, 13 foot Cultipacker, Cole Fertilizer Side Dresser, 2-row Cultivator, 1-row Cultivator, 9' International Disc Harrow, Subsoiler, Middle Buster, Subframe Backhoe, Vicon Vari-Spreader.
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06-21-2010, 03:42 PM #20Member
- Join Date
- Oct 2009
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- 29
- Location
- Addison County Vermont
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- New Holland T2320
Re: Pumpkin Crop
What a nice-looking field. I can't tell, is that 6 rows, like 400 or 500 feet? What do you have in those other seedbeds? When do you usually seed pumpkins up there?
I'll post a pic of my little 60 hill patch. I'm still battling the cucumber beetles, although the plants are 3 weeks old now and starting to get big enough to withstand a moderate infestation. I got a little shy about using more Sevin, as effective as it was, because I think I get some foliar burn... even with a dry leaf, cloudy day application, with the label-recommended mixture. I'm using Rotenone/Pyrethrin now, which doesn't have the knockdown power by a long shot, but I seem to gain on them each time. I amazed at how fast the were on this patch though, completely virgin till too, and I've never grown any cucurbits in any quantity anywhere nearby.
We've been getting consistent rain the last few weeks, not quite enough to be excessive, but close. It's just been a cloudy and cool between the rains, until lately when we've finally got some successive days in the 80's, and all the heat-loving vegetables including the pumpkins really took off.
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