Each fall at the Alaska State Fair in Palmer, Alaska, there is a competition for the largest vegetables from around the state. Here are Pictures from 2006

During the summer, Alaska's long daylight hours and heavy rains do strange things to vegetables.
They grow, and grow, and grow.

A WORLD RECORD
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AND TO GIVE YOU SOME PERSPECTIVE OF HOW BIG THIS REALLY IS

There's no need to make this one clickable because it is here to show you how big it is next to people

Tell a friend, they are not going to believe this

Found on www.answers.yahoo.com

Palmer, Alaska located about 45 miles north of Anchorage, is in the Matanuska-Susitna valley where glacial run-off is loaded with glacial silt that collects along the Matanuska River. Frequent high winds blow the silt from the river throughout the Palmer area, continually enriching the soil with nutrients. Palmer is far enough North that from May to early September it doesn't get totally dark at night, with 2.5 to 3 hours of semi-darkness each night. Temperatures during that same timeframe can get as high as in the 90s. With the super rich soil, long daylight hours and hot summers, it is possible to grow gigantic vegetables.

Here's another website where you can go to see pictures of giant vegies and even order seeds.

contact: ALASKA GIANT SEEDS, P.O. Box 1072, Palmer, AK 99645, U.S.A., fax +1-907-746-4781, Home Phone +1-907-746-4781, e-mail: AlaskaGiant@alaskaGiant.com

Source(s):
Lifetime Alaska resident.
www.shopalaskafromhome.com
www.alaskaGiant.com


OTHER WORLD RECORDS
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Rutabaga 53.2 LBS
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Kale 58.6 LBS
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Be sure to click the Giant Veggies 2004 button in the upper left of this screen
to see even more Giant Vegetables



Plants bulk up for fair

Record kohlrabi among vegetables that loved the rains


By GEORGE BRYSON
Anchorage Daily News

Published: August 25, 2006
Last Modified: August 25, 2006 at 09:28 AM

PALMER -- Maybe you don't like all this cool, wet weather. Officials at the Alaska State Fair aren't that crazy about it either, knowing how a blustery day can throw a serious dampener on fair attendance.

But rutabagas apparently love the rain. So do turnips and beets and most of the other root vegetables and cold crops that have been soaking up storm water in Southcentral Alaska quite happily all August long.

None so ravenously as one 82-pound kohlrabi, which shattered the old world record for kohlrabies by nearly 20 pounds this week.

Several of this year's largest home-grown vegetables were on display Thursday for the opening day of the fair, including the record-breaking kohlrabi grown by Palmer gardener Scott Robb.

Along with Robb's obvious knack for growing giant vegetables -- he holds five other world records -- you can also credit the rain.

Toward the end of the recent deluge, Robb and his wife, Mardie, knew they had some hefty-looking kohlrabies coming to harvest. But they didn't realize just how big they were until they began to peel off some of the leaves that shield the bulb, which grows slightly off the ground.

"When we began removing the leaves we said, 'Oh my gosh, oh my gosh ...'?" Mardie recalled.

The heavy rains, however, played havoc with the giant cabbages, which aren't scheduled to be weighed and judged until a week from today.

Big cabbages like cold, wet weather, too, but they draw the line at flash floods.

"Their leaves are so big -- they just sit there like big bowls and they load up with water in heavy rain," Scott Robb said. "It can break the leaves over.

"Then eventually, if they stay damp long enough or wet long enough, they'll start to rot. And that's what you're going to see at the Giant Cabbage Weigh Off next week -- a lot of stinky, rotten cabbages."

If they even make it to the fair.

According to Kathy Liska, the fair's crop supervisor, entries are down sharply, partly because of the rain. Some of the farms and gardens to the north, where flooding knocked out bridges and stranded homeowners, have been no-shows so far.

"I don't think I have many at all from up there," Liska reported. "They were under water.

"You guys had a great picture of that cabin floating down the river. I think that's where the gardens went too."

The other key factor, Liska said, was the late spring, which resulted in a late summer and later-than-normal harvests. In a big year, she said, the fair usually receives about 2,000 crop entries. So far it has received about 500.

But Robb expects that to change dramatically next Wednesday, when the fair stages its "second entry" weigh-in for growers whose crops need just a little more time.

Rumor has it there's a pumpkin set to be trailered up from Nikiski that might tip the scales at more than 1,000 pounds, which would be a state record but not a world record. And Robb, himself, might have even larger vegetables to enter.

"I have two more kohlrabi that should be even bigger than what I have here now," he said. "And I have a zucchini that's probably 60 pounds right now."

Which wouldn't add to his slate of world records -- which include a 39-pound turnip, a 42-pound kale, a 63-pound celery, a 65-pound cantaloupe and a 75-pound rutabaga, the last of which earned Robb a trip to the David Letterman Show -- but would still be fairly decent, setting another state record.

And a fair day at the fair.

Daily News reporter George Bryson can be reached at gbryson@adn.com.