|
Pumpkin Seed
Big Max Pumpkin
Connecticut Field Pumpkin
Gurney's® Giant Magic Hybrid Pumpkin
Jack-Be-Little Pumpkin
Lumina Pumpkin
Musquee de Provence Pumpkin
One Too Many Hybrid Pumpkin
Vegetable Plants
Fruit Trees and Nut Trees
Small Fruit and Berries
Perennials
Rose Bushes
Garden Bulbs
Ground Covers and Vines
Shrubs & Hedges
Ornamental Grasses
Trees and Windbreaks
House and Patio Plants
Flower and Grass Seed
Growing Supplies and Aids
Sprouting Seeds & Supplies
Heirloom Vegetables
Web Exclusive
|
Big Max Pumpkin
Biggest All-Purpose Pumpkin
 ( 7 customer reviews)
Handsome pumpkins, up to 100 lbs. or more,
make excellent pies and impressive jack-o’-lanterns.
Fine-grained, bright orange flesh is great for
canning or freezing. 110 DAYS. Seed Counts: 1/2 oz. of pumpkin seeds contains about 65-150 seeds
and sows a 100-ft. row. This item ships at the proper planting time for your region in both spring and fall.
If the current shipping season is closed, your order will ship at the proper time in the next season.
Product Details
Spacing: 4 - 5 to a hill, hills 6' apart Depth: 1 inches Sun/Shade: full sun Germination: 6-10 days Days To Maturity: 110 days Fruit: red-orange skin and thick, bright orange flesh
| Comments: Planting: Sow seed when the weather is warm and all danger of frost is past. Pumpkins prefer rich, well-fertilized soil. Plant seeds 1 inch deep, 4-5 to a hill, spacing hills 6 feet apart. Germination should take place in 6-10 days.Care: Cultivate or mulch to reduce weeds. Water well during dry weather. After seedlings grow 2 inches tall, thin to 2 plants per hill.Harvest: Harvest fruits when the skin has turned completely orange. Cut from the vine, leaving 2-3 inch stem attached to the fruit. Store in a warm, dry spot. This variety produces squash-type pumpkins that grow to 100 pounds, with red-orange skin and thick, bright orange flesh. Shipping: View Shipping Schedule Big Max Pumpkin Ships In Both Spring And Fall
|
Customer Reviews Overall Rating: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers Sort Reviews: Newest | Oldest | Highest Rating | Lowest Rating  - Tuesday, March 27, 2012 Big Max Reviewed By: Ray (Burton, Ohio) The Big Max will produce a nice size pumpkin, if you take basic care of them. I planted 24 plants and ended up with (18) 70lbs pumpkins and (6) 50lbs ones. I also only allowed for one pumpkin to grow per plant.  - Monday, March 14, 2011 Beautiful large pumpkins Reviewed By: Shawna (Strawberry Point, Iowa) I planted these pumpkins along with the Dill's Atlantic. I planted them in a sandy soil. Every single seed I planted germinated. The plants took off and grew everywhere. The leaves and vines were huge. I had so many pumpkins that I didn't know what to do with them all. We had to use a skidloader and manpower to move them. Big Max also keeps a pumpkin shape well so it looks nice.  - Wednesday, September 22, 2010 Pretty good Reviewed By: Sean (Northeast, Missouri) I didn't think I was going to like these plants at first. They take their sweet time gettin established from seeds to solid plants. Once they are established however...watch out. The vines will grow to 20+ ft easily. Some good sized fruit too tho I haven't weighed any of them yet. Not massive by any means but not bad either. Alot more resistant to cucumber beetles than Dills Atlantic. I will be planting these again next year Read More Reviews
|
|
|
Big Max Pumpkin
Biggest All-Purpose Pumpkin
(7
customer reviews)
Handsome pumpkins, up to 100 lbs. or more,
make excellent pies and impressive jack-o’-lanterns.
Fine-grained, bright orange flesh is great for
canning or freezing. 110 DAYS.
Seed Counts: 1/2 oz. of pumpkin seeds contains about 65-150 seeds
and sows a 100-ft. row.
This item ships at the proper planting time for your region in both spring and fall.
If the current shipping season is closed, your order will ship at the proper time in the next season.
|
Product Details
Spacing: 4 - 5 to a hill, hills 6' apart Depth: 1 inches Sun/Shade: full sun Germination: 6-10 days Days To Maturity: 110 days Fruit: red-orange skin and thick, bright orange flesh
| Comments: Planting: Sow seed when the weather is warm and all danger of frost is past. Pumpkins prefer rich, well-fertilized soil. Plant seeds 1 inch deep, 4-5 to a hill, spacing hills 6 feet apart. Germination should take place in 6-10 days.Care: Cultivate or mulch to reduce weeds. Water well during dry weather. After seedlings grow 2 inches tall, thin to 2 plants per hill.Harvest: Harvest fruits when the skin has turned completely orange. Cut from the vine, leaving 2-3 inch stem attached to the fruit. Store in a warm, dry spot. This variety produces squash-type pumpkins that grow to 100 pounds, with red-orange skin and thick, bright orange flesh. Shipping: View Shipping Schedule Big Max Pumpkin Ships In Both Spring And Fall
|
Customer Reviews
Overall Rating:
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers
Sort Reviews: Newest |
Oldest |
Highest Rating |
Lowest Rating 
- Tuesday, March 27, 2012
Big Max
Reviewed By:
Ray (Burton, Ohio)
The Big Max will produce a nice size pumpkin, if you take basic care of them. I planted 24 plants and ended up with (18) 70lbs pumpkins and (6) 50lbs ones. I also only allowed for one pumpkin to grow per plant.

- Monday, March 14, 2011
Beautiful large pumpkins
Reviewed By:
Shawna (Strawberry Point, Iowa)
I planted these pumpkins along with the Dill's Atlantic. I planted them in a sandy soil. Every single seed I planted germinated. The plants took off and grew everywhere. The leaves and vines were huge. I had so many pumpkins that I didn't know what to do with them all. We had to use a skidloader and manpower to move them. Big Max also keeps a pumpkin shape well so it looks nice.

- Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Pretty good
Reviewed By:
Sean (Northeast, Missouri)
I didn't think I was going to like these plants at first. They take their sweet time gettin established from seeds to solid plants. Once they are established however...watch out. The vines will grow to 20+ ft easily. Some good sized fruit too tho I haven't weighed any of them yet. Not massive by any means but not bad either. Alot more resistant to cucumber beetles than Dills Atlantic. I will be planting these again next year
Read More Reviews