Living near the watermelon "capital" of the world
:laughing::laughing:Let's see . . . that's a title claimed by Cordele, Crisp County, Georgia, Rush Springs, Oklahoma, Hope, Arkansas, Dilley, Texas, Lulling, Texas, Beardstown, Illinois, Lincoln, Illinois, Green River, Utah, and I wonder how many others.:laughing: As a teenager, I lived for awhile in Marlow, OK, a few miles south of Rush Springs and loved attending the annual Watermelon Festival, but it's now been 55 years since I was there. Watermelons were such a big crop in that area that I can remember a guy with a mule and rubber tired wagon going up and down residential streets selling watermelons two for a quarter. And one day I noticed a 101 pound watermelon in front of a grocery store for $3.50. My first that was that
no one would pay that kind of price for a watermelon, but then I learned they really would . . . for the seeds.
The last watermelon I bought was a "product of Texas" seedless melon from Walmart and was an excellent flavor. In addition to the right kind of soil and right amount of moisture, I think a great deal depends on how ripe a melon is when it's picked.