Desert Girl put hers in pots that she could bring indoors when it got cold. Apparently a bean seed was also in the soil!
She had to keep checking them to make sure they had enough water.
Eventually it was warm enough to plant the pumpkins out in the garden. Desert Girl dug a hole and put the plants in, with ag bag around to keep the weeds down.
We soon found that the insects were enjoying the pumpkin plants. We weren't sure they would survive.
Fortunately they seemed to grow. We watched with eager anticipation for the first blooms.
The vines started creeping out, and we wondered if we had given them enough room.
And then we started seeing flowers!
And more flowers. And more flowers. But no little pumpkins. We tried some hand pollination.
It worked for one plant, which started producing a bunch of pumpkins. We pinched off extra blossoms so only four pumpkins would grow. But the other plant didn't produce any, so we eventually pulled it up to let the other one have more space.
The pumpkins grew and grew, and then they stopped growing. We thought they might grow more, but they seemed to just stop. We talked to others who were growing pumpkins, and they said theirs did the same thing.
Finally it was time for the competition to end. Desert Girl took the largest one to the 4-H meeting and weighed it in. It was 51.8 pounds, the largest in the club! She won $10 from donations for the prize money and was quite excited by that.
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