After a one year respite, the annual event of breaking the world record weight for giant pumpkins was renewed. Christy Harp brought a 1,725 pound pumpkin to the Ohio Valley Giant Pumpkin Growers (OVGPG) Giant Pumpkin Weigh-Off on Saturday, October 3, 2009.

Picture compliments of Christy's mom, Pam Dieffenbaugher
Cristy's new world record pumpkin, beat the previous record of 1689 pounds in 2007, held by Joe Jutras from North Scituate, Rhode Island.
Oh....... the gentleman in the picture above, is Nick Harp, Christy's proud husband.
Note: Where did the seed that Christy used to break the record come from? It was 2007 Jutras 1385.5 seed.
Up to now, Christy Harp of Jackson Township, Ohio, was known as a teacher. But, now she can teach the world how to grow giant pumpkins. We hope and anticipate that Christy's great accomplishment will help to educate and to propel all growers towards breaking the 2,000 pound barrier.
Congratulations to Christy Harp on this spectacular accomplishment!!
Picture compliments of Christy's mom, Pam Dieffenbaugher
The record breaker, wider than the average human arm span, was grown in Jackson Township, Ohio and officially weighed in at 1,725 pounds at the Ohio Valley Giant Pumpkin Growers annual weigh-off earlier this month. The behemoth squash (of a variety of pumpkin called the Atlantic Giant) was grown by school teacher Christy Harp.
A prize-winning giant pumpkin dwarfs its smaller cousins. Giant pumpkins are a variety breed from more moderate-sized stock in the 1970s. Credit: stockxpertHarp said that she nursed her pumpkin to its whopping size by "pulling all the weeds and being out in the patch lots of hours," according to worldrecordsacademy.org.
Elsewhere, the nation's pumpkin crop is plentiful this year, though heavy rains and early frost could produce some regional shortages before Halloween.
Pumpkin weather
Pumpkins, which are thought to be native to North America, are a warm-weather crop, which means they grow best in the summer months with temperatures in the low to mid-80s (Fahrenheit), according to George Janowiak, president of the Illinois Pumpkin Growers Association.
Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and California are the top pumpkin-producing states in the United States. The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates that about 1.5 billion pounds of pumpkins are produced in the country each year. Estimates also show that pumpkin crops have been growing over the last couple of decades.
Regionally, there have been some pumpkin problems this year.
An early frost in August killed off much of the Wisconsin, Janowiak said.
Another pumpkin killer is early-season heavy rain, which can soak a field and rot the seeds, Janowiak told LiveScience. The seeds must be replanted, which can leave a farmer under pressure to make the mid-fall harvest.
Unusually high rain amounts crippled many crops in New England this year, with Maine hit particularly hard. Some growers expected there to be local shortages.
But other areas, such as Illinois, the pumpkin-growing capital of the United States, have faired better this year.
Bigger and bigger
Most of the pumpkins grown for sale are much smaller than Harp's record-setter, of course. They're used to carve jack o' lanterns and make pumpkin pie. All pumpkins are from the family the family Cucurbitaceae. The giant variety that Harp and Janowiak grow is called Cucurbita maxima and were developed from more standard-sized stock by a man in Nova Scotia named Howard Dill in the early 1970s.
It took years to grow giant pumpkins to the size of Harp's, Janowiak said. But ever since the giant variety was created, "it just escalate[d] into trying to grow them bigger and bigger," he said.
Janowiak said that pumpkin supplies in Illinois are plentiful this year and while harvests in New England may suffer, Americans won't be facing a pumpkin shortage anytime soon.
(source: pumpkinnook.com and livescience.com)