Seasonal & Holidays

Biggest Pumpkin In The Patch: Can Douglasville Beat U.S. Record?

Make your visit to the pumpkin patches near Douglasville a school field trip. What else in nature weighs 2,500-2,600 pounds?

These big pumpkins at a patch near Las Vegas don’t come close to breaking the U.S. and world records, but it could be educational to ask the kiddos to figure the circumference of the gourds.
These big pumpkins at a patch near Las Vegas don’t come close to breaking the U.S. and world records, but it could be educational to ask the kiddos to figure the circumference of the gourds. (Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

DOUGLASVILLE, GA — There’s a contest for everything, and pumpkins are no exception. You may be rightfully proud of that enormous pumpkin in your patch, but unless it weighs upward of 2,500 pounds, you’re not flirting with any kind of record. It could be a record in Douglasville, though.

That’s a fun challenge to consider as you and your family head out on a rite of fall and visit the pumpkin patches near Douglasville. Where’s the biggest pumpkin you’ve seen?

You can even make it a diversion from the coronavirus pandemic with a classroom outing. Teach them a little about pi — not pumpkin pie, but the mathematical formula to calculate the circumference of a circle — or how to convert pounds to kilograms.

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Here’s where to start:

Sleepy Hollow Farm

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  • 628 Sleepy Hollow Road, Powder Springs, GA 30127
  • Wed.-Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., must arrive by 5 p.m. Also open Tuesdays Oct. 20 and Oct. 27.
  • $10 per person, 2 and under free with purchase of adult ticket
  • Pumpkin patch, corn maze, farm playground, tractor rides, more
  • 770-880-8846
  • SleepyHollowTrees.com

Still Family Farm

  • 5682 Macland Road, Powder Springs, GA 30127
  • Saturdays and Sundays through Nov. 1, 10 a.m. until dusk. No tickets sold once the sun sets.
  • Pumpkin Patch, hayrides, 5-acre zinnia maze, more
  • $15, $2 military discount with ID, children 4 and under free
  • 678-283-6951
  • StillFamilyFarm.com

Ole McDermitt’s Farm

  • 102 Baxter Road, Carrollton, GA 30117
  • Through Nov. 1. Hours vary, see website.
  • Pumpkin patch, corn maze, farm animals, more
  • $13, $10 for 65 and over, children 2 and under free, cash only
  • 678-850-8948
  • OleMcDermittsFarm.com

Read more here: Douglasville Pumpkin Patch Guide, Weekend Weather Forecast

The largest pumpkin ever recorded in the U.S. was grown by Steve Geddes. The pumpkin that the Boscawen, New Hampshire, man grew in 2018 tipped the scale at 2,528 pounds to win the top prize at the Deerfield Fair. The impressively sized pumpkin was 165 pounds heavier than the previous U.S. record-holder.

Neither came close to besting world record-holder, Mathia Willemijn, whose 2016 record still stands for the 2,624.6-pound pumpkin that won that year’s European Weigh-Off in Germany, according to Guinness World Records, which describes the gourd as “car-sized.”

Whether pumpkins are in the 2,500- or 2,600-pound range, it’s a lot of pumpkin.

Ask the kiddos this: What else found in nature weighs that much?

A hippopotamus living in the wild can weigh about 5,800 pounds, but some of the smaller hippos weigh about the same as Geddes’ pumpkin.

The largest and heaviest bovine species is the Asian gaur. The bulls can weigh up to 2,500 pounds, but cows weigh significantly less. Another fun fact that separates these cattle from many other species: Both male and female gaurs have horns.

The world and U.S. record-setting pumpkins both are larger than the Australian saltwater crocodile, the largest croc species in the world. They can weigh more than 2,200 pounds.

And here’s another fun fact from Bengtson’s, a Chicago-area pumpkin patch, and perhaps a lesson in agriculture for the spring: The health of the vine matters.

“If you are attempting to grow a massive pumpkin, you should realize that the entire vine is working toward that same goal,” the site says. “All of the water and sunlight received by the leaves and roots are being dedicated to the single pumpkin.”

Making sure the pumpkin has room to grow is another key. Growers should tear out roots that may be near the pumpkin while taking care not to detach the stem.

Once the pumpkin reaches the size of a softball, remove all the other pumpkins from the vine so all the plant’s energy is directed at creating a prize-winning pumpkin.

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