The Standard Journal

Pumpkin time in Polk

- By Ricky Ensley

Always harvest pumpkins when they become mature. At this stage, the rind is hard (resists denting by thumbnail pressure) and the pumpkin has developed the characteri­stic color for that cultivar.

As a general rule, naturally aging vines are indirect indicators of pumpkin maturity. However, to ensure good keeping quality, mature pumpkins should be harvested prior to cold damage, which increases the likelihood of storage rots.

When harvesting, leave three to four inches of stem. Pumpkins with stems removed do not store as well since the stem scars may afford rot organisms convenient entry.

Suggestion­s for harvesting and storing your pumpkins

1. Establish, fertilize, and manage the crop properly so that healthy (free of disease, insects, and mechanical injury) pumpkins are available for harvesting.

2. Harvest the fruit when it is mature and the rind is hard, but before night temperatur­es are below 40 degrees F and well before a frost or a hard freeze.

3. Harvest the fruit when it is dry. Do not handle wet fruit.

4. Harvest, handle, and store fruit carefully to avoid injuries.

5. Discard all fruit that is immature, injured, or has rots or blemishes. These fruit should not be harvested or stored.

6. Do not pick up freshly harvested fruit by the stem since many will separate from the fruit and provide easier access for rot organisms.

7. Do not stack the fruit higher than three feet (ideally, single layer for large pumpkins).

8. Do not permit harvested or stored fruit to get wet. Usually pumpkins are not washed, but if washing is necessary, be sure the water is chlorinate­d.

9. For better keeping, some growers cure pumpkins for 10 to 20 days at 80 to 85 degrees F with good ventilatio­n.

10. Harvested fruit should be stored with good ventilatio­n at temperatur­es from 50 to 55 degrees F and relative humidity between 50 to 75 percent.

Refrigerat­ion temperatur­es (35 – 40 degrees F) may cause chilling injuries and shorten shelf life. High temperatur­e storage will result in excessive loss of weight, color, and culinary qualities.

High humidity may promote rots. Storage life without significan­t loss in quality is typically two or three months.

 ??  ?? Ricky Ensley
Ricky Ensley

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