By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mother Nature pulled a cruel trick on growers of
Mississippi's non-irrigated pumpkins, and the few treats
available after the hot, dry summer will be found in patches
with access to water. David
Nagel, vegetable specialist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said growers irrigate less
than 100 acres of Mississippi's 480 commercial pumpkin
acres. "With
irrigation, pumpkin yields were near normal or slightly
below normal and maturing three to four weeks early. Without
irrigation, pumpkin yields were an absolute disaster," Nagel
said. "Dryland pumpkin yields are off about 90
percent." Nagel
said he's heard of growers averaging less than one pumpkin
per acre. All of the state's crop matured more quickly
because of the hot growing season. "Mississippi
is traditionally an import state for pumpkins. For pumpkins
that had to be harvested early, proper storage will help
them last longer," Nagel said. "If stored in a dry area, out
of direct sunlight, pumpkins will keep two
months." Researchers
at the North Mississippi Research and Extension Center in
Verona planted a wide variety of pumpkins, some for spacing
research and others in anticipation of the North Mississippi
Garden Expo at the end of September. "We
planted early so the pumpkins would be ready by the field
day, but if we hadn't planted that soon, the crop would have
still been about a month earlier than normal," said Kent
Cushman, a research horticulturist with the Mississippi
Agriculture and Forestry Experiment Station in
Verona. "Even
with drip irrigation on the plants all day for days at a
time, they would wilt down in the hot afternoons we had,"
Cushman said. Because
most spacing recommendations are based on northern crop
needs, researchers wanted to test for Mississippi's unique
needs. Results have not be tabulated, but the two varieties
studied were Aspen, with semi-vigorous vines, and Howden
Biggie, with very vigorous vines. Some of
the other varieties were chosen more for their unique
appearance than for yield potential. Cinderella, which
resembles the fairytale stagecoach, produces a blotchy color
and decays around the stem -- eventually effecting the rest
of the pumpkin. Prizewinner may take top honors for its
size, but it will lose points for its misshapened appearance
and poor coloring. Cushman
said the medium-sized white pumpkins, Lumina, are good
conversation pieces but don't seem to be what people want
from a pumpkin. Their tendency to rot more quickly will also
prevent them from being on a variety recommendation list for
Mississippi. "The
miniatures like Jack Be Little were vigorous and set
hundreds of pumpkins," Cushman said. "The miniature white
Baby Boo also performed well." "Pumpkins
need lots of sunshine and if we keep having summer droughts,
access to irrigation will be the key to success," Cushman
said. Released:
Oct. 13, 2000
Mississippi
Crop Report
No Treats In 2000
Pumpkin Patches
Contact: Dr. David Nagel, (662) 325-4558
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:28:20
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop00/cr001013.htm
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