Plenty of pumpkins tho'.
A little background:
The Arata Pumpkin Farm is the oldest working pumpkin farm in San Mateo County, California. Pumpkins have been a way of life at the Arata Farm since 1932...How much water is in 3,000 tons of pumpkin?
About 3,000 tons of pumpkins are grown each year by 15 or so commercial growers in the Half Moon Bay area who ship them throughout the US. The Arata Farm distributes pumpkins to Rite Aid Stores nationwide.
In addition to the pumpkins, Arata has a 2-2.5 acre straw bale labyrinth that changes every year. That's one of its outer walls.
Admission to the labyrinth is $7, but you can enter it as many times as you want. I believe it's also open most of the year. And you can do it at night with flashlights. The walls are about 7' high but I managed to take this picture from inside with the Hipstamatic app on my iPhone, holding it over my 6'2"-tall head.
Inside the labyrinth you'll find a minotaur dispensing small, golden pumpkins. Which I think is pretty darn cool. There are also tractor rides, a petting zoo, a haunted barn...and gladiator fights.
And corn, which was much taller last year.
Alas, we did not stay for the gladiator fights.
Half Moon Bay is a troubled town. I'm not sure how it all went down but city leaders deliberately, and very foolishly, flooded a large piece of land to create wetland for birds. Unfortunately, the land was owned by a developer who sued in federal court and won a judgment for $38.6M. As the town's annual budget is only $10M, I believe they get to vote this November on whether to raise taxes to settle the judgment, or declare bankruptcy and disincorporate. The federal judge in that case, by the way, is the same federal judge who recently found California's anti-same-sex marriage Proposition 8 unconstitutional. He recently announced his retirement.
We stopped in town to visit the little garden furnishing store, Half to Have It. Quelle surprise--I took pictures.
These glass faces are cool.
We bought one of these fake floats last time.
Maybe we'll have one of these in the next garden:
Michelle at From Seed to Table makes pizza in hers--among other things, I'm sure.
The grounds are mulched with tumbled glass.
Mammies for Christopher C.! I think he once said he has a collection of these things. I think I said I did not approve... Ha, ha! Well, you don't see these for sale in California very often.
I like the hands, but the rest of my group said, "Um, no."
We all agreed on the passionflower tho'.
"It's a flower in a flower," said Jason.
6 comments:
Jason will be so excited to be quoted...Thanks for showing us a good time! BTW- Alex loved her pumpkin but said "This is not big enough to make pumpkin pie", guess we will have to get more....
Good read. Great pictures. -Gannburg
You and Guy are so good about getting out there and enjoying life.
It has been so long I don't know what part of my Black Americana collection survived the purge when I left Maui. Spring should reveal what is left when I move in and unpack.
I'd LOVE to have one of those glass faces and the hands are wonderful!! I'd want at least one of those too.
I like the hands too. And the tumbled glass mulch. And I love the picture from inside the labyrinth.
That's quite a statue in the first picture - not the sort of thing I expect to see at a pumpkin farm.
The entire post is a visual pleasure, Chuck. Pumpkins and corn always seem so midwestern to me - but they're obviously very happy in Half Moon Bay.
Everything in the Half to Have It store is interesting, but my purchase might be those glass ringie things... think the birds would think they were cool waiting-your-turn at the birdbath perches.
Annie at the Transplantable Rose
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