Oh pumpkin, my pumpkin.
Last year, we discovered the world of pumpkins. As fast as neighbors dropped off their unwanted autumn decor, we scooped them up, identified them, and saved the seeds. We had a list of pumpkin varieties that we’d never even heard of before!
This year, we shared the seeds with our neighbors, passed some along to family, and saved some seeds for ourselves to plant around the farm.
Here’s what we planted: Marina di Chioggia in the rabbit poop area of the old chicken yard, Mellow Yellow on the northeast corner outside of the pasture, Kakai hull-less at the base of the Jerusalem artichokes, and the Long Island cheese at the base of the raspberries by the old chicken coop.
So so so many pumpkins. Each with a different reason for being here.
Marina di chioggia: flavor, beauty, color (inside and out)
Long Island cheese: keepability, a great storage pumpkin
Kakai Hull-less: the seed flavor, the seed color (green), the uniqueness of the seeds
Mellow Yellow: for the external color of the pumpkin (bright yellow)
The one big thing that surprised me about growing pumpkins was how blazing fast they sprouted. We planted the seeds in little 2×2-inch soil blocks. They sprouted within a matter of days and seemed to double in size each day. Then, when planted, they continue their rapid, accelerated growth. Very inspiring.