The Delaware Gazette

Pumpkin farmers have smashing crop despite drought

John Ack­er­man poses with one of his big­ger pump­kins still grow­ing and wait­ing to be har­vested on his farm Tues­day in Mor­ton, Ill. (Asso­ci­ated Press | Seth Perlman)


JIM SUHR

AP Busi­ness Writer

ST. LOUIS — Farm­ers in a stretch of Illi­nois where most of the nation’s pump­kins are grown say their crop looks rel­a­tively smash­ing and is likely to be one of the few suc­cesses in a year when severe drought baked most of the nation’s heartland.

The drought forced thou­sands of ranch­ers to sell off cat­tle because pas­tures were too dry to graze, and corn and soy­bean farm­ers watched their plants wither in the sum­mer sun. But John Ack­er­man said most of the pump­kins he planted fared “fan­tas­tic” for a sim­ple, sin­gle rea­son: Pump­kins dig dry weather.

“Pump­kins have been kind of a bright spot in pro­duc­tion this year,” said Ack­er­man, 51, whose farm near Mor­ton, Ill., has been in his fam­ily for more than a century.

Pathol­ogy may help explain why pump­kins coped bet­ter than most crops at beat­ing the heat. A rel­a­tive of squashes, cucum­bers, water­mel­ons and can­taloupe, pump­kins tend to thrive in warm, tem­per­ate cli­mates that stave off fun­gus, mold and other rind-rotting dis­eases that spread in wet con­di­tions, said Dan Egel, a plant pathol­o­gist with Pur­due University’s extension.

Also, pump­kins grown from seeds — the most com­mon way — have tremen­dous root sys­tems that reach deep into the ground, enabling them to reach mois­ture that corn and other crops with­out tap­roots can­not find.

“I think we’re going to have a pretty decent crop of pump­kins,” Egel said.

Ack­er­man said he planted about 70 per­cent of his 30 acres of pump­kins in May, and that por­tion did well. He planted the rest of his pump­kins in late June and early July, about the time the drought really took hold, and they “sat in dust for a while” but are finally turn­ing orange now.

It’s a sharp — and wel­come — break from recent years, when soggy con­di­tions have hurt the nation’s pump­kin pro­duc­tion. In 2009, farm­ers hired by Nes­tle to grow pump­kins for the Libby’s pumpkin-canning plant near Mor­ton had to leave much of their crop in the field after rain sat­u­rated the ground, bog­ging trac­tors down in the mud. The result was a short­age of canned pump­kin that cre­ated bid­ding wars for the stuff on eBay dur­ing the holidays.

The next sum­mer turned out to be among the wettest ever in Illi­nois, and pump­kin pro­duc­tion plum­meted in much of the state, although not around Mor­ton. And last sum­mer, the rem­nants of Hur­ri­cane Irene and other storms dev­as­tated the pump­kin crop in the Northeast.

“Mother Nature can mess with you, and there can be con­se­quences,” said Roz O’Hearn, a Nes­tle spokes­woman. “In the past cou­ple of years, we’ve been at the oppo­site ends of the Mother Nature continuum.”

This year, she said, “you’ll be able to find pump­kins for your holidays.”

Nes­tle pro­duces more than 85 per­cent of the world’s canned pump­kin each year under the Libby’s label, and much of it comes from the area around Mor­ton. The com­pany hires farm­ers to grow Dick­in­son pump­kin, an oval-shaped, pale orange vari­ety that’s denser, meatier and less hol­low than carv­ing or orna­men­tal pumpkins.

Farm­ers who irri­gate seem to have pro­duced big­ger and more pump­kins than those who don’t this year, O’Hearn said. But over­all, she said, the har­vest is “fine.”

AP News Posted by on Oct 12 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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