Pumpkins are ready to harvest usually by the end of Sept. Here's a chronology of a pumpkin's life cycle:If planted April 24...Germinated May 5... then it would be fully ripe by Sept 30:
http://www.pumpkinnook.com/howto/cycle.htm
Put a board under your ripening pumpkin to deter bugs, moles and rotting from underneath.
Some wait til the vines have withered to harvest their pumpkins. Then they are left to cure in the field for 10 days. They can even remain in the garden through a light, vine-killing frost. However...all mature pumpkins should be harvested before temperatures drop into the mid to low 20's.
http://www.ipm.iastate.edu/ipm/hortnews/1997/9-12-1997/harvpump.html
You'll know your pumpkin is fully ripe when the stems are dry and the skin resists penetration by a thumbnail. Don't harvest it until the skin has reached full color and has hardened. Another sign that a pumpkin is ready to be harvested is that the stem starts to crack.
You can also check with the type of pumpkin you planted & how many days it grows to maturity. Then calculate when your pumpkin should be ready to harvest.
When determining the maturity of pumpkins, keep in mind that it won't get bigger or oranger once it's off the vine. When you cut, leave a 3-5 '' stem on it. After cutting you'd have to cure it in the field for ten days & then clean it with bleach water & store it in a cool place.
Small fruits (1 to 4 pounds, 80 to 100 days to harvest)
Intermediate fruits (6 to 12 pounds, 110 days to harvest)
Large fruits (15 to 40 pounds, 120 days to harvest)
Jumbo fruits (50 to 100+ pounds, 120 days to harvest) are often called Jumbo Pumpkins and include Big Max and various Mammoth varieties.
http://www.ext.vt.edu/pubs/envirohort/426-406/426-406.html
Good luck! Hope this helps.
2007-08-25 11:22:32
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answer #1
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answered by ANGEL 7
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maximum culmination would desire to be pollinated no count if by using domesticated honeybees or wild pollinators (such because of the fact the fig wasp suggested formerly). If wild pollinators are traveling, then human beings have had no area in that and for this reason no exploitation has been accomplished. i do now not think of it quite is totally sensible to hint the monetary pollination information of the each and all of the farms from which your fruit originates. One has to allure to the line on the impractical or now not possible. Honey being an prompt results of human manipulation, that's quite prevented. comparable element with fertilizer. it quite is perplexing to be conscious of no count in the adventure that your produce became into grown employing manure, or guy made fertilizer or compost. I continuously tell human beings, in case you're incredibly excited on the subject of the origins of your nutrients, purchase from a farmer's industry the place you may ask questions, or stumble on an area farm to pass to. anybody is chuffed to chat approximately what they do.
2016-12-31 05:36:31
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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Usually when the stem dies back and turns brown, usually best at first frost.
2007-08-25 11:35:54
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answer #3
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answered by Jeremiah Johnson 7 7
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