Ohio pumpkin crop damaged by heavy rain, then dry weather
Published 10:08 am Monday, October 12, 2015
COLUMBUS (AP) — A rainy planting season and drier weather later has left Ohio with a damaged pumpkin crop, though that might be affecting the selection more than the prices consumers are paying.
Co-owner Charla Devine of Devine Farms in Hebron tells The Columbus Dispatch that too much rain led to a crop failure. She lost two to three acres of pumpkins that would’ve been sold at her farm stand.
Ohio State University Extension educator Jim Jasinski says some growers got a double punch from the weather. After the rain subsided, a dry August further hurt the growth of pumpkins, a crop that is nearly 90 percent water.
The Blade newspaper in Toledo reports this year’s pumpkins didn’t grow to their expected size unless farmers irrigated their fields.