Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Harvesting The Pumpkins


We have had quit the adventure with this pumpkin. The day before the weigh off they loaded the pumpkins on to a trailer with a crane. It was very exciting. The news crews were there and a lot of our faithful supporter.




Melissa was so thoughtful and brought cute fall sugar cookies for the kids to snack on.


I love it when the boys are lined up like this.


Our way nice neighbor Frayne Spens came with his crane to lift the pumpkins.



Audrey and Hyrum on the tractor.


Me and my pumpkin growing champ.


The kids are by Matt's pumpkin. The other two are Tyler's.


Matt, Tyler Quigley and Gordon Tanner

Go McQuig's!!! I think we unofficially named the patch McQuig's.

(When I was pregnant with Walt, Eli told Melissa if we had a girl he wanted to name her Emily McQuigly. I am so happy he feel's so loved by the Quigley's he just smashes our names together.)

2010 State Record Pumpkin


This was one exciting day!! I was feeling kinda worked up waiting for the pumpkin to be weighed. Matt seemed to be holding it together okay. He had a long week working up to the weigh off. I don't think he had much sleep. It was really exciting when the weight was announced. His pumpkin weighed in at 1169 lbs. he had beet the old state record of 1104 lbs. Next they weighed the pumpkin that was measuring bigger than his, it came in just under 1100 lbs. When I heard the other pumpkins weight called I wanted to run and jump on Matt. I was so excited! I pushed my feelings back inside me so I wouldn't make a fool of myself. Matt looked like, well he just looked amazing. He had that look in his eye that I love. When he allows himself to feel deep feelings he look's like that. He had accomplished what he said he was going to do, what he wanted to do. One of my favorite things about Matt is when he put's him mind to something, he does it!! He gives it his all. All his hard work and effort paid off big time.


I am always going to love remembering this day. When his weight was announced I wanted to cry my eyes out. I walked over to my Dad and Angie. They were tearing up too. Ang said, "I can't believe we are crying over a pumpkin." We laughed. It sounds funny to cry over a pumpkin, but really we cried because we know how hard Matt worked on this pumpkin, how much he wanted to reach his goal. To watch him succeed was really a very touching moment. That moment for me was even grater than when it was announced he won.

The victory bath of ice water


The kids think the trophy is one of the coolest things they have ever seen.


Channel 2 and channel 5 were there interviewing him again. I am now married to a celebrity! I am not sure how I feel about that.


Matt and Tyler. Best pumpkin growers in the state of Utah if you ask me.





While we were waiting for Matt's turn to be weighed we played at Thanksgiving Point.

They have a great little petting zoo there. The kids minus Hyrum loved ridding the ponies.


I think Walt loved it the most. He had a hard time waiting in line for his turn. He is such an animal lover.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Standard Examiner Article / Pampered Pumpkin: Growers hope giant squash breaks state record



Last updated

Monday, September 20, 2010 - 11:32pm

Story Images

Erin Hooley/Standard-Examiner Matt McConkie uncovers his estimated 1,100-pound pumpkin at his garden in Washington Terrace on Monday. He and Tyler Quigley are growing huge pumpkins for a competition on Saturday at Thanksgiving Point.


Erin Hooley/Standard-Examiner Tyler Quigley shows the scale of his estimated 900-pound pumpkin at his garden in Washington Terrace on Monday. He and Matt McConkie are growing huge pumpkins for a competition on Saturday at Thanksgiving Point.


WASHINGTON TERRACE -- What may be Utah's biggest pumpkin lies in an undisclosed location guarded by surveillance cameras, nurtured with loving care by a grower who hand-pollinated it, studied its genealogy, fed it only the best organic foods and sheltered it from storm and sun.

Despite all that, it is one of the uglier pumpkins you will encounter: pale yellow, streaked, misshapen, rather blob-like.

But it is big.

"We go for size," said its grower, Matt McConkie.

This is take-no-prisoners pumpkin growing. McConkie and his Mountain Green neighbor Tyler Quigley spent the last year raising what they hope are the biggest pumpkins the state of Utah has ever seen.

To that end:

  • They took a five-year lease on a vacant lot in Washington Terrace because it has a longer growing season than Mountain Green.
  • They installed an irrigation system, built a shed and put up security cameras. They make visiting reporters promise not to tell where this lot is.
  • A year ago, they tilled 100 tons of manure and mulch into the ground.
  • This spring, they planted carefully selected pumpkin seeds that can sell for as much as $500 each.
  • As the pumpkins grew, they were shaded with tents. This keeps the sun off, so the hulls stay soft as they grow, and protects the fruit from hail.

Each man started eight plants, sprouting carefully chosen Atlantic Giant seeds. They selected the best pumpkin on each vine and cut off the rest.

Most of the eight fell to weather, disease or disaster, but as of Monday, Quigley had two left and McConkie one.

Quigley's two pumpkins, each growing on its own 750 square feet of ground, are 600 and 900 pounds. McConkie's lone survivor estimates out to 1,100 pounds.

McConkie said his pumpkin is gaining 10 pounds a day. If it tops 1,104 pounds when it is officially weighed Saturday, it will be a new state record.

McConkie and Quigley aren't just raising pumpkins for fun, of course. That would be silly. They are members of the Utah Giant Pumpkin Growers, which is offering a $1,000 prize for the biggest pumpkin grown this year.

The current record of 1,104 pounds was set in 2006 by Kenny Blair, of Bountiful. The bar has risen very high very fast: The 1990 record was 132 pounds, a fruit size that would just draw scorn today.

"There's no secret in growing them," McConkie said. "We put hefty amounts of manure in the soil, so it's all organic as far as feed goes."

Plus, they spray the growing pumpkins with emulsified fish meal and seaweed, which has natural growth hormones.

Why do grown men raise pumpkins? Quigley, who is in his first year, blamed McConkie for inspiring him by growing a 286-pound monster in the front yard.

McConkie started growing pumpkins three years ago because "they're just really fun to grow. It's just gardening at another level."

Their pumpkins will be harvested Friday and, thanks to a friend with a truck and crane, hauled to Thanksgiving Point, where the Utah Giant Pumpkin Growers (www.utahpumpkingrowers.com) will officially weigh all comers.

And then what?

Quigley hopes to display his at Mountain Green Elementary School. His and McConkie's kids go to school there, so the pumpkins will be a great show-and-tell. After that, he plans for the gourds to go to Hogle Zoo for its Thanksgiving Day Feast for the Beasts.

McConkie has other plans.

"I'm going to drop mine from a crane just to watch it splat."


Sweet Little Baby


I got to baby-sit this cute little bug yesterday. Taylor had her six week doctor appointment. After I put Walt down for his nap I held Oliver and read books with Hyrum. It was heavenly. What a treat for me. Really, I think a new little baby is one of my top ten favorite ten favorite things. My friend Haley Miller did the photos of Oliver. I love this one (I love them all) of him with my Dad's childhood monsters.









Sunday, September 19, 2010

Garner Reunion 2010


I LOVE Garner family reunions. When I was a kid one of my favorite things was a Garner reunion. I had so much fun with my cousins. I loved they way my grandparents house smelled and just the feelings of love that I felt when I walked in the door. My cousin Stephanie and I would ride bikes down to the speedy mart to get penny candy. We would sit on the board that Grandpa had laid across the canal, swing our feet in the cool water and eat our treats.


This week Grandpa was the resident of the month where he lives.


It is always nice to see Grandpa.


My cute cousins, Janay and Heather. I wish I would have taken more pictures with all of them.


Lotty May and Wlat playing with rocks.

Aunt Tay and Walt


Me and Jane.


Aunt Leslie and here watermelon pinata. The pinata is a tradition my Grandma started. Aunt Leslie has helped keep that tradition alive.


Jane hitting the pinata.


Eli's turn with the pinata.


Hyrum with the pinata.


Jane and Lotty May.


Jane and Matt. I hope my kids grow up to have fond memories of family and understand the importance of extended family's.

Saturday, September 18, 2010

I Have Been "SPARKED"


Oops, I put the photo's in a weird order. Spark was held in Linden Utah at Noah's.


Totally new to me... Felting. I learned how to make wool into felt. I was excited that this seamed like something I could do with my kids. I brought some extra home and Hyrum has already mad it into beads.



I had the privelige of attending Spark this fall. I went with my Mom and my good friend Melissa. Three very talented woman put together this amazing retreat all about nurturing your creative soul.


All the decor was awesome. I loved beeing sourounded by so much cutness. not just any cuteness. Cuteness that I absolutly adored.


All the table centerpieces were different but all used old fun things. the last day they put a photo of us in a jar and put them around on the tables. We were to find our jar, step out of our comfort zones and make some new friends. I was a bit nervous about this but it ended up being really fun. I wish I could take credit for this photo, but I didn't take it. I snagged it off of Liz Kartchners blog. It was kinda fun to see my photo in one of the jars.


My Mom and Melissa are both people who have influenced my creativity greatly. It was such a treat to be there with them. "At times our own light goes out and is rekindled by a SPARK from another person. Each of us has cause to think with deep gratitude of those who have lightened the flame within us" Albert Schweitsner



The cute gal in the middle here is Margie. She was such a hoot. She taught a class using lampshades.



My favorite class.... We made clips. That was right up my ally.

The class I learned the most in..... That would be a toss up between digital design and photography. The best thing about both of the classes was I left with the feeling of, "I CAN do this."


How fun are photo booth's? I remember having my mom take me to K-Mart with my friends, to get photos at the photo booth. K-Mart and Lagoon were the only place that still had them. Just like polaroid photos, I think they should come back.