Prodigious Pumpkin Carves out Place in the Washakie County, Wy., Record Book
The giant pumpkins of Worland, Wyoming, had their season in the sun – a tour of schools, a Kiwanis Club presentation, and an honored spot in the homecoming parade. But this time of year, there’s only one fate for a record-setting pumpkin, no matter how pampered it might be.
A 338 pound pumpkin is hoisted onto a scale for weigh-in. Photo via Dr. Caitlin Youngquist.
Time has run out for a couple of upstart giant pumpkins in Worland, Wyoming.
Maximus and Gourdon (‘Gourd-on’) burst onto the scene last spring, the subject of Twitter tweets, YouTube videos and a grower’s blog at Big Pumpkins.com. They have their own Facebook page (The Giant Pumpkins of Worland).
Worland, a town of about 5,500 in north-central Wyoming, seems to be growing a patch of pumpkin fanatics.
Caitlin Youngquist, a University of Wyoming Extension educator, introduced the aptly named Maximus and Gourdon on her “Dr. Caitlin” website in March, and the pair just kept growing, literally.
A soil scientist in Washakie County and the Big Horn Basin, Youngquist specializes in soil health, compost, organic waste management – and giant pumpkins.
Her “Dr. Caitlin” site covers hot topics to growers, such as pumpkins’ chemical makeup, male and female flowers, fungus and root relations and eating baby pumpkins – which she did, grilled, with salmon.
Washakie County grower Jay Richard nurtured Maximus and Gourdon from Dill’s Atlantic Giant pumpkin seeds, with Youngquist advising and shooting how-to videos on her cell phone. Like a proud papa, Richard posted photos and growth reports on Big Pumpkins.com.
Both pumpkins have flat bottoms, he said, but Maximus developed a collapsed top.
“It was a genetic mutation,” he said. “I was advised to just pull him, because he would never amount to anything.”
Though Maximus was supposed to be the star, Richard pinned new hopes on Gourdon. Both pumpkins lived for one thing—the big weigh-in at the Lungren Girls’ Farm on September 27.
On the big day, pickup trucks and flatbed trailers hauling hefty pumpkins arrived at the Girls’ Farm section of South Flat Land and Livestock south of town. Maximus and Gourdon sprawled across their wooden pallets. A skid-steer forklift offloaded them beside other orange hopefuls.
“We found it was a good way to get people excited about growing giant pumpkins,” said Younquist, who had two, Maybelle and Missy, in the running.
“It was an adrenaline rush,” said first-year grower Kevin Diede. “My pumpkin started off like a rocket ship, but it slowed down when I stopped singing to it. You can’t go out every night with the guitar.”
As kids wandered through the 12-acre, USA-shaped corn maze at the Lungren Girls’ Farm, the skid-steer lifted contenders onto the certified scale. Gourdon busted the county record at 596 lbs. The genetic mutant, Maximus, weighed in at a respectable 490.
With celebrity status cinched, the punk stars set out on tour. Richard took time from his auto detailing business to accompany his’ “’kins” to four schools, the Kiwanis Club and the local nursing home. They even rode in the homecoming parade October 2. The homecoming theme was Squash ’em.
Gourdon the pumpkin finished out his days as a dragon head, which Ryan Green carved into the pumpkin’s 10-inch-thick walls. Photo from the Gourdon and Maximus Facebook page.
“The end of the line is when they get carved,” said Richard.
Gourdon was carved by Ryan Green, who Richard calls a “master,” in an exhibition October 28 in front of Blair’s Grocery Store. Green prepared by making a model of Gourdon, using about a hundred photographs and a 3D printer.
Richard pulled the seed from the gutted vegetable to donate to the high school horticulture class and any would-be growers who join his contest class in the spring. He already has 10 signed up.
Worland pumpkins returned to Lungren Girls’ Farm October 30 for the 2nd Annual Pumpkin Gutting, a carving contest where the much-altered Gourdon made its last public appearance.
Richard confided the ultimate demise of Maximus and Gourdon will be over the fence to feed goats.
“You go into it with a guess and a by-golly,” he said. “I can’t wait to do it again next year.”
Chavawn Kelley is a communications and technology writer and editor at University of Wyoming Extension.
Related
Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under a Creative Commons license.
You may republish our stories for free, online or in print. Simply copy and paste the article contents from the box below. Note, some images and interactive features may not be included here. Read our Republishing Guidelines for more information.
Prodigious Pumpkin Carves out Place in the Washakie County, Wy., Record Book
by Chavawn Kelley, The Daily Yonder November 6, 2015