2. Pumpkins are members of the “ Cucurbita " family of plants. This family also includes squash , gourds , cucumbers , and melons . Photo: http://www.kidsweb.at/kuerbis/pumpkin5.htm http:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pumpkin
3. Pumpkins are usually yellow-orange to orange in color, and sometimes white . Pumpkins are Fruits! yellow They have hard shells. A central cavity within the fruit holds the seeds and coarse, stringy pulp . http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pumpkin white orange
4. Pumpkins are usually shaped like a flattened globe, or can be oblong or pear shaped. The skin or shell is somewhat smooth and sometimes has vertical lines down the side of the fruit. http://www.hort.purdue.edu/ext/senior/vegetabl/pumpkin1.htm Pumpkin fruits can vary greatly in size from less than five pounds to more than one hundred pounds!!
5. Six of the seven continents can grow pumpkins! They even grow in the state of Alaska! (On which continent is Alaska?) Antarctica is the only continent that they won't grow in. http://www.pumpkin-patch.com/facts.html
6. The name pumpkin originated from the Greek word for "large melon" which is " pepon ." "Pepon" was changed by the French into "pompon." http:// www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/pumpkins/history.html Pumpkin The English changed "pompon" to "Pumpion." American colonists changed "pumpion" into " pumpkin ."
7. Pumpkins grow from seeds. The seeds are usually planted in the spring after danger of frost has passed – late April or May. Chronology of the Life Cycle of A Giant Atlantic Pumpkin http:// www.pumpkinnook.com/howto/cycle.htm
8. The pumpkin plant is a vine . It has large, dark green leaves, orange trumpet-shaped flowers, and prickly hairs on the stems and leaves. Like cucumbers, corn, and muskmelons, the pumpkin has separate male and female flowers on the same plant. http://www.hort.purdue.edu/ext/senior/vegetabl/pumpkin1.htm
9. Pumpkin plants have large, dark green, lobed leaves. http://www.hort.purdue.edu/ext/senior/vegetabl/pumpkin1.htm
10. This is a male pumpkin flower. They are 4 to 5 inches in diameter. The vine has separate male and female flowers. The fruit is beginning to form at the base of this female flower. http://www.hort.purdue.edu/ext/senior/vegetabl/pumpkin1.htm Pumpkin flowers are yellow and they are edible!
11. Pumpkins are harvested in the fall ! It usually takes 90 to 120 days for a seed to grow into a ripened pumpkin. Photo: http://www.kidsweb.at/kuerbis/pumpkin3.htm Chronology of the Life Cycle of A Pumpkin http:// www.pumpkinnook.com/howto/cycle.htm
12. Sugar Pie Tahitian Pink Banana Turk's Turban Lumina Cinderella Queensland Blue http://www.ebfarm.com/farmstand/farmstand_pumpkin-id.html There are lots of varieties of pumpkins! http://www.pumpkin-patch.com/varieties.html
13. http:// www.pumpkinnook.com/giants/record.htm Christy Harp brought a 1,725 pound pumpkin to the Ohio Valley Giant Pumpkin Growers Giant Pumpkin Weigh-Off on Saturday, October 3, 2009. The Atlantic Giant is the largest variety of pumpkin!
14. http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/pumpkins/nutrition.html Pumpkin Nutrition Facts (1 cup cooked, boiled, drained, without salt) Pumpkins are good for you! Calories 49 Protein 2 grams Carbohydrate 12 grams Dietary Fiber 3 grams Calcium 37 mg Iron 1.4 mg Magnesium 22 mg Potassium 564 mg Zinc 1 mg Selenium .50 mg Vitamin C 12 mg Niacin 1 mg Folate 21 mcg Vitamin A 2650 IU Vitamin E 3 mg Pumpkins are 90 % water! Low Fat Vitamins Few Calories
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17. http://www.naturalsciences.org/funstuff/notebook/plants/pumpkin.html Carving out faces in big pumpkins to make jack-o'-lanterns is now an American tradition, but the jack-o'-lantern didn't originate here. Halloween began in Ireland where the first jack-o'-lanterns were made of potatoes, rutabagas, turnips, or beets . According to an old Irish legend, a man called Stingy Jack had been mean and conniving while he lived, and after his death was forced to walk the Earth carrying a turnip lantern with a burning coal inside. He became known as "Jack of the Lantern" or "Jack-o'-lantern." The Irish put jack-o'-lanterns in windows or by doors on Halloween night to scare him and other evil spirits away. It wasn't until Irish immigrants came to America that pumpkins were used. So the next time you put a jack-o'-lantern in your window, stop and think about mean ol' Jack.