Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Seasons of Life



Five weeks of our maze and pumpkin patch season came to a close yesterday.

There have been thousands of people on the farm, and the phone was constanting ringing asking questions about the maze. We've seen hot and muddy weather, changing to cool and dry.

Two fields of green leafy vines shading pumpkins has turned into two trampled brown barren grounds. The maze field has shrink in size, from frost and the pads of feet. A farmstead filled with over a hundred huge blooming mums, to a few ready for the compost pile. The buffalo are enjoying solitude again without the tramloads of people drifting by.

Think of the change in the season, from mid September to November tomorrow, and how fast time changes.

If I sound melancolhy, its because I've spent the afternoon writing the funeral program for an uncle that died this week. He went into the hospital the Friday before our season officially started, and died the day after it ended - the whole time fighting problems from emergency surgery and the complications that finally overcome his body.

The seasons of his life finally ended after over 80 decades. And how do you fit a life into 350 words to fit a 5.5 by 8.5 page?

He was a kind soul, and a gentleman, always thoughtful of his family and friends. Leland was a farmer and a nature lover, attuned to the birds giving song, the weather in the sky, and he enjoyed the beauty of the countryside around him. Leland explored local roads and national highways, visiting family, historical sites, and collecting family genealogy. He had a pilot’s license and was a member of the Flying Farmers of America. One of Leland’s favorite pastimes was having daily coffee with friends.
Except for a brief marriage that ended in her early death, he spent his years alone until having a special friend for last eight years. But his time was always filled with family, friends, and nature.

We relied on his keen memory of details and facts. And I can just here his "Well, Let's see now...." when we'd come to him for help.
I think I'll ask him for help now to finish his story.

'Bye Leland, 'bye Fall...



Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Muddy Maze


Rain, rain, go away, come again...in November!

We're booked solid with school field trips between now and the end of the month, and it's raining again today. Two local groups still came out between storms, but two big schools that were coming from a distance rescheduled.

Our first two weekends of the maze season were hot and windy, and then the weather changed. Now we're working around cool and wet days instead. We've had some weather perfect days for some schools, like yesterday. The groups rode the tram out to see the buffalo herd, each shot the pumpkin slingshot, and walked through the maze. And of course their biggest thrill is picking out their own personal pumpkin from the pumpkin fields.

Weather is to improve for Friday and Saturday, so we'll hope for the best.

The area United Way had scheduled a fundraiser out here last Friday, and had to postpone until this Friday because of the weather. Let's hope the weather cooperates for them this time. We're making buffalo chili and fresh fruit pies for the event, so visitors will have a great meal before they walk through the maze and venture into the Haunted Trail.

If you're coming out to our maze this weekend, except a little mud, and a lot of fun!

Monday, October 8, 2007

881 lb. Pumpkin wins Kansas Contest


Weekend Two of our maze and pumpkin season is over and I'm catching up today. Both weekends have been hot and windy, with beautiful Mondays the next day.
Crowds have been pretty good considering the weather. Attendance is usually light until the middle of the month when the temperatures cool down and people in the mood for fall decorations and halloween.
People have enjoyed our maze and theme, and spend a relaxing 3-5 hours on our farm to walk through the maze, do all the activities, and ride the Prairie Tram to see the buffalo herd. Many stay for a meal and then go through the maze again with a Glow Stick, and finish the night with the Haunted Trial.
We hosted the Official Kansas Giant Pumpkin Contest this last Saturday. How do you weigh a giant pumpkin? Very carefully, and with a skid loader! We had seven entries, ranging from an 881 lber from a seasoned grower, to a 52 lb. pumpkin grown in a little girl's garden. (She did great for her first year, and I think it weighed about as much as she did.)
The winning pumpkin weighed in at a whopping 881 pounds, but the contest was kind of bittersweet for all of us. A family was supposed to bring a bigger pumpkin, measuring to weigh over 1000 lbs, which would have been Kansas' first ever grown that large. But the family didn't show up, so we starting weighing the pumpkins, hoping they had some kind of delay and were just running late.
Turns out their pumpkin, plus their Kansas State fair winning entry was smashed by vandals. We felt so bad for them. The young daughter had won second place at last year's contest, so we knew of the family and were rooting for this big accomplishment.
There was an article about the contest, and the vandalism in the newspapers, so we all "made the news", but not how we had planned.
We growers always worry about the weather when tending to our giants, but not about someone smashing our summer's efforts. The family were able to save some seeds, so I hope they can grow a winner for next year's contest.