Pumpkin Planting!

   / Pumpkin Planting! #71  
Very nice!

Well gents, it looks like I am out of the pumkin business. A quick look during the rain storm on Saturday did not reveal any pumpkins in the patch....none....nada... :(

Wow DMF, that's terrible news! Not a single pumpkin. Did you ever see any bees in your patch? It would be nice to know why your plants did not set any fruit this year.

Even after the incredible slow start to the summer my pumpkins are doing alright. It looks like my large pumpkin (Howden) crop will be off by 25% or so while my medium pumpkin (Jack-O-Lantern) crop will be up by 20% or so but the average size will be smaller than average. It looks like my miniature pumpkin and gourd production will be the largest I have ever had. The plants are just full of fruit. All I need another two to three weeks of warm growing weather to finish them off.

I am harvesting lot's of corn from my corn patch right now. Its a few weeks late but it's a really nice crop this summer.


Some mums I sell along with my pumpkins.

Those are nice mums Barry. My wife always buys a few mum plants for the fall.

Here are some pics of mine.

Great looking patch you have there.
 
Last edited:
   / Pumpkin Planting! #72  
I am sorry to hear that. Can you buy some wholesale just to keep you customers coming down your driveway?

Any idea what the wholesale price is in your area. Around here I have heard of 8 - 10 cents a pound.

Barry
 
   / Pumpkin Planting! #73  
I sold about 200 mums last year so of courst I went ahead and planted 800 this year.

I hope I sell them.

Barry
 
   / Pumpkin Planting!
  • Thread Starter
#74  
I had more bees than ever around this year... I have no idea why absolutely nothing started; I knew it was going to be bad with the wet spring but we never figured on this.

As far as wholesale, I'm planning on turning both of my patches into more hay... a lot less work for me in the long run.

:(
 
   / Pumpkin Planting! #75  
I will take my pumpkin work over my hay work any day.

The bales are a log heavier and you have to harvest more than once a year.
 
   / Pumpkin Planting!
  • Thread Starter
#76  
Not for me!
Hay:
1. Spread 2-3 tons of lime in the spring or fall
2. First cut, usually done in 3 or 4 sections, cut, tedder, rake, bale and move approx. 600 +/- bales to the barn
3. Second cut; usually done in 3 or 4 sections, cut, tedder, rake, bale 450 +/- bales and watch my customers pick it up off the field and pay me.
4. Maybe get a third cut, usually done in 2 sections, 200 +/- bales that we either sell off the field or sell some and move some to the barn.
5. Spread fertilizer (composted horse manure) every other fall
6. In March, when all the people who wouldn't think of giving their horses first cut run out of hay, sell it to them from the barn (at a higher cost than if they'd have gotten it off the field the previous spring of course)
Pumpkins:
1. Plow in last year's green manure crop.
2. Pick rocks
3. Till soil
4. Pick rocks
5. Plant pumpkins directly assuming it's a dry enough year to do so on time, if it's a wet year (usually the case) do the additional work:
a. Buy peat pots
b. Start seeds (800 to 1000) in peat pots
c. When field is dry enough, manually plant them into the patch
6. Weed plants
a. Till between rows
b. Hoe by hand between plants
c. Pick rocks
7. Side dress plants with fertilizer
8. Spray with Sevin if/when cucumber beetles show up
9. Water as often as necessary
10. Weed plants
a. Till between rows
b. Hoe by hand between plants
c. Pick rocks
11. Weed plants as best as possible once plants start to run
12. Keep deer out of patch, scarecrows, noisemakers, etc.
13. Worry that:
a. The plants won't fruit
b. The fruit will come too late to sell in season
c. The deer will eat the fruit
d. The people won't come to buy them
14. Set up displays and stand area.
15. Harvest and move several hundred pumpkins from the patch to the stand area.
16. Advertise
17. Spend every weekend in October and late September tied to the stand area
18. Plow under plants.
19. Pick rocks.
20. Till soil.
21. Plant cover crop/green manure
22. After October 31st move all unsold pumpkins to pile in back field to rot.
Of course, when the pumpkins are great we make a lot more money on that then the hay, but last year was marginal for us and this year is going to be a bust so it makes sense to pull out; at least for a season or two.
 
   / Pumpkin Planting! #77  
Just wait until next spring. Next thing you know you'll find yourself ...
a. looking through the see catalogs
b. picking a few varieties of pumpkins
c. ordering seeds
d. ordering 800 - 1000 peat pots
e. planting 800 - 1000 pumpkin seeds
f. tilling patch
g. picking rocks (I too have to do this a few times each year)
h. transplanting 800 - 1000 plants
i. to z. repeating all the above things....in your above post:D
 
   / Pumpkin Planting!
  • Thread Starter
#78  
Just wait until next spring. Next thing you know you'll find yourself ...
a. looking through the see catalogs
b. picking a few varieties of pumpkins
c. ordering seeds
d. ordering 800 - 1000 peat pots
e. planting 800 - 1000 pumpkin seeds
f. tilling patch
g. picking rocks (I too have to do this a few times each year)
h. transplanting 800 - 1000 plants
i. to z. repeating all the above things....in your above post:D

You're probably right...although a year or two off would be nice.
 
   / Pumpkin Planting! #79  
Hi Kernopelli, Pumpkins have both male and female flowers.

Well, this turned out to be my problem....all male flowers. I started checking my blooms every morning and quickly figured out that my plants are producing about 99.999% males. As of today, I have two pumpkins and I'm pretty bummed about it.
Anyone have any idea why the plants would so predominantly produce only male flowers? Is it possible that it is related to a nutrient deficiency since I really never fertilized?
 
   / Pumpkin Planting! #80  
Well, this turned out to be my problem....all male flowers. I started checking my blooms every morning and quickly figured out that my plants are producing about 99.999% males. As of today, I have two pumpkins and I'm pretty bummed about it.
Anyone have any idea why the plants would so predominantly produce only male flowers? Is it possible that it is related to a nutrient deficiency since I really never fertilized?


Here is a quote from the growing pumpkins article in the link below. Cold weather will produce mainly male flowers.

http://www.michiganorganic.msu.edu/Portals/0/Pumpkins Squash and Gourds.pdf
 

Attachments

  • cold weather pumpkins.jpg
    cold weather pumpkins.jpg
    167.2 KB · Views: 113

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

LOAD OUT AND SHIPPING (A51572)
LOAD OUT AND...
Power Unit (A50121)
Power Unit (A50121)
2017 POLARIS RANGER 500 EFI UTV (A51247)
2017 POLARIS...
2017 Ram 4500 Bucket Truck (A52748)
2017 Ram 4500...
JOHN DEERE 1725 CCS (A53084)
JOHN DEERE 1725...
2010 Ford Edge SE SUV (A51694)
2010 Ford Edge SE...
 
Top