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Wondrous World! Alaska’s Giant Vegetables - Agriculture - Nairaland

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Wondrous World! Alaska’s Giant Vegetables by prof2007: 2:17pm On Apr 26, 2020
The Alaska State Fair held annually in Palmer, 42 miles northeast of Anchorage, is not your regular agricultural show. Here farmers from the Matanuska-Susitna Valley routinely display vegetables and produce of gargantuan sizes — a 63 kg cabbage, 30kg cantaloupe and 16kg broccoli are just a few of the monsters that have sprung forth from Alaska's soil in recent years.

"Some things [are so big], you can't even recognize what they are," said the fair's crop superintendent Kathy Liska.

WHY DO VEGETABLES GROW SO BIG IN ALASKA?
It's because of the sun. Alaska typically has a very short growing season, only 105 days, on average. For comparison, California’s growing season lasts nearly 300 days. However, the Alaskan growing season does not have long dark nights. The state is located close to the north pole where it enjoys up to 19 hours of sunshine each day, during summer and at the peak of the growing season.

The extra hours of sunlight allows Alaskan crops to just keep growing and growing. Even through the growing season is months shorter than the rest of the country, Alaska’s gardeners grow some of the largest vegetables in the world.

The photosynthetic boost also makes the produce sweeter. Alaskan carrots, for instance, spend nearly 3/4th of the day while the sun is available making sugar, and only the remaining 1/4th of its time is spent turning that sugar into starch. Plants like cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, brussel sprouts, radishes, turnips, potatoes, beets, carrots, spinach, and lettuce all grow very well here.

Farming in the Matanuska-Susitna Valley originally began as an experiment in the 1930s to increase agricultural output of the country during the Great Depression. More than 240,000 acres were set aside for farming and farming families from Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan were brought in colonize the land. But the lack of infrastructure and unavailability of basic supplies discouraged the settlers and by 1940, over half of the population had left the valley.

In 1965, only 20 families were left. Although the colony was not a booming success, it did become stable enough to provide dairy and farming. It did not significantly increase the population of the area, but it did develop the Matanuska Valley as the primary agriculturally productive region within Alaska. The extraordinary growing season and the giant size of its vegetables have now become the area's trademark.

SOURCE: https://www.amusingplanet.com/2015/10/alaskas-giant-vegetables.html?m=1

Re: Wondrous World! Alaska’s Giant Vegetables by Greyworld: 2:23pm On Apr 26, 2020
Damn!! those cucumbers.
Re: Wondrous World! Alaska’s Giant Vegetables by bizzibodi(m): 2:43pm On Sep 06, 2020
Cucumbers wey pass cucumbers grin grin grin
Re: Wondrous World! Alaska’s Giant Vegetables by solostar1: 5:41pm On Sep 06, 2020
Level pass level

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