Huge Nikiski pumpkin wins giant crown at Alaska State Fair after even larger pumpkin disqualified
by Mike Dunham / Anchorage Daily News
Sep 01, 2011 | 7039 views | 5 5 comments | 32 32 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Dale Marshall is dwarfed by an Atlantic Giant Pumpkin that he estimates to be around 1,780-pounds inside a greenhouse in Anchorage on Aug. 29, 2011. The pumpkin was knocked out of the state fair competition Wednesday Aug. 31, 2011 by a tiny hole. Puncture or not, the pumpkin is in rare company. The world record weight for a pumpkin is 1,810 pounds. The winner was a 1,287-pound pumpkin that is the biggest pumpkin ever grown for the annual Giant Pumpkin competition at the state fair. (AP Photo/Anchorage Daily News, Bill Roth)
Dale Marshall is dwarfed by an Atlantic Giant Pumpkin that he estimates to be around 1,780-pounds inside a greenhouse in Anchorage on Aug. 29, 2011. The pumpkin was knocked out of the state fair competition Wednesday Aug. 31, 2011 by a tiny hole. Puncture or not, the pumpkin is in rare company. The world record weight for a pumpkin is 1,810 pounds. The winner was a 1,287-pound pumpkin that is the biggest pumpkin ever grown for the annual Giant Pumpkin competition at the state fair. (AP Photo/Anchorage Daily News, Bill Roth)
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In this Aug. 26, 2011, photo, J.D. Megchelsen and his pug Maggie pose with the pumpkin Megchelsen was preparing to take from his greenhouse in Nikiski, Alaska, to the Alaska State Fair in Palmer. The giant gourd set a new record for the state of Alaska at 1,287 pounds after a competing pumpkin was disqualified. (AP Photo/Peninsula Clarion, M. Scott Moon)
In this Aug. 26, 2011, photo, J.D. Megchelsen and his pug Maggie pose with the pumpkin Megchelsen was preparing to take from his greenhouse in Nikiski, Alaska, to the Alaska State Fair in Palmer. The giant gourd set a new record for the state of Alaska at 1,287 pounds after a competing pumpkin was disqualified. (AP Photo/Peninsula Clarion, M. Scott Moon)
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Dale Marshall checks a small hole on the bottom of his 1,723 pound pumpkin that kept him from winning or setting a record at the Alaska State Fair grounds in Palmer, Alaska on Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2011. The giant gourd was grown by Marshall in his backyard greenhouse. Puncture or not, the pumpkin is in rare company. The world record weight for a pumpkin is 1,810 pounds. The winner was a 1,287-pound pumpkin that is the biggest pumpkin ever grown for the annual Giant Pumpkin competition at the state fair. (AP Photo/Anchorage Daily News, Bill Roth)
Dale Marshall checks a small hole on the bottom of his 1,723 pound pumpkin that kept him from winning or setting a record at the Alaska State Fair grounds in Palmer, Alaska on Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2011. The giant gourd was grown by Marshall in his backyard greenhouse. Puncture or not, the pumpkin is in rare company. The world record weight for a pumpkin is 1,810 pounds. The winner was a 1,287-pound pumpkin that is the biggest pumpkin ever grown for the annual Giant Pumpkin competition at the state fair. (AP Photo/Anchorage Daily News, Bill Roth)
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J.D. Megchelsen of Nikiski, Alaska reacts to his giant pumpkin named "Lucy Lu," foreground, setting a new state record of 1,287 pounds during a weigh-off at the Alaska State Fair in Palmer on Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2011. Megchelsen’s pumpkin was the winner and declared the biggest pumpkin ever grown for the annual Giant Pumpkin competition at the state fair. Dale Marshall’s pumpkin, weighing in at 1,723 pounds, was disqualified because of a tiny hole. (AP Photo/Anchorage Daily News, Bill Roth)
J.D. Megchelsen of Nikiski, Alaska reacts to his giant pumpkin named "Lucy Lu," foreground, setting a new state record of 1,287 pounds during a weigh-off at the Alaska State Fair in Palmer on Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2011. Megchelsen’s pumpkin was the winner and declared the biggest pumpkin ever grown for the annual Giant Pumpkin competition at the state fair. Dale Marshall’s pumpkin, weighing in at 1,723 pounds, was disqualified because of a tiny hole. (AP Photo/Anchorage Daily News, Bill Roth)
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Updated 1:50 p.m. with details.

PALMER, Alaska - "Lucy Lu," a 1,287-pound pumpkin grown by John J.D. Megchelsen of Nikiski, took the title as the biggest pumpkin ever grown in Alaska at the Giant Pumpkin Weigh In at the Alaska State Fair on Wednesday.

A 1,723-pounder grown by Dale Marshall of Anchorage, "Patrick," was disqualified because of a hole in the bottom that went through to the core of the gourd. It will, however, be placed on view in the farm products display starting today.

There was a great deal of curiosity over whether Marshall's pumpkin would break the world record currently held by a New Jersey grower, 1810 pounds. A sullen silence fell over the crowd as judges crawled under the giant vegetable, suspended from a hydraulic hoist, to inspect the flaw, less than 3 inches across, probing it and deliberating for several minutes.

There were groans when officials finally announced that the specimen from Sand Lake had run afoul of the official rules of the Great Pump kin Commonwealth, the international group that makes the rules and keeps the records.

Had it qualified, "Patrick" would have been only the fourth pumpkin in history to have topped 1,700 pounds. "It could take another five years to grow one this big again," said Marshall.

He was disappointed but philosophical. "I can't think of anything I could have done different that would have prevented it," he said.

Roughly the size and shape of a Smart car, and slightly heavier, Marshall's pumpkin will be put on display with the other giant vegetables for the remainder of the fair.

Megchelsen is a pioneer in Alaska's fledgling humongous pumpkin scene. In 2004, his 707-pound "Thunder Horse" smashed the state record of 347 pounds set by Homer resident David Schroer in 1997. In 2006 he broke the 1,000 pound mark, holding the record until last year when Marshall set a new state record at 1101 pounds.

The growing season for pumpkins is brief in Alaska. The titans at the fair grew for only three months, gaining 20 to 40 pounds a day.

Serious pumpkin-growing is a fairly new addition to the state fair and more complicated than displaying turnips, for example. Getting the colossal squash from hothouse to the fair and weighed involved flatbeds, straps, cranes, a forklift and a hydraulic hoist.

This was the first year more than two growers have entered giant pumpkins in the Alaska weigh-off, which is one of 70 such sanctioned events in the world. Four growers competed. In addition to Megchelsen and Marshall, Mardie Robb of Palmer submitted a pumpkin weighing 213 pounds and James Bushey, also of Palmer, entered one that reached 182 pounds after growing for just two months. Both were first time pumpkineers.

(Robb is the wife of Scott Robb, whose several records include the world record kale, 105.9 pounds, grown in 2007 -- which Mardie says tasted pretty good.)

No word on what she plans to do with her pumpkin. But Marshall's whoppers have a history of going on display at his driveway around Halloween.

Alaska holds several world records for large vegetables, including: root beet, 42.75 lb.; romanesco broccoli, 35 lb.; carrot, 18.985 lb.; celery, 63.03 lb.; kohlrabi, 96.95 lb.; rutabaga, 82.9 lb.; turnip, 39.2 lb.; kale, 105.9 lb.; and, of course, cabbage, 127 lb.

Vegetable weigh-ins at the fair continue with the Giant Cabbage Weigh-in at 6 p.m. on Friday.

Comments
(5)
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spearfisherman
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September 01, 2011
i was wondering if Dave Marshall and John Megchelson are going to be selling the seeds from those giants ? i would be interested to buy some if they have are going to be selling them if a major seed company has not bought them up already ., an if selling them could You guys put an address to send or online for information, that is a feat worth saving the seeds from those pumpkins!.Job well done even with a hole in the bottom ? from a mouse or whatever. i would be interested in the seeds from that 1780 pounder for sure .salcha small timer gardener.
MrsSaenz
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September 01, 2011
Damn, I love to garden. My God, I only weigh 110, soaking wet! This took dedication to grow,

fairbanks
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September 01, 2011
I just posted the story from the ADN, which has a few more details. - Julie
Mamushka
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September 01, 2011
I agree. Where is the rest of the story? Why did a hole in the pumpkin disqualify him? I'm amazed it's just a small hole considering having to move a 1723# pumpkin from Anchorage to Palmer and then onto a scale, etc.
mrbgibs
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September 01, 2011
OK, the giant pumpkin was disqualified because of a small hole, how about finishing the story and please explain why a hole is enough to get the pumpkin rejected.
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