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Archive for the ‘Pumpkin Fest’ Category

The Real Housewives of Jefferson County at Ridgefield Farm

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

Every year we try to outdo ourselves with our PumpkinFest Hayride and pumpkin people, and this year we present the Reality Hayride Hall of Fame, featuring “The Biggest Loser,” “Dancing with the Stars,” “The Bachelor,” “Bridezilla,” “America’s Dirtiest Jobs” and of course, “The Real Housewives of Jefferson County.”

Please join us on Saturdays and Sundays from 10 am – 5 pm for PumpkinFest.  The Hayride is only $3 per person, and the Kids’ Corn Maze is only $3 per person.  Get them both for $5!

PumpkinFest Details – click here.

Dog and Cat adoptathon at Ridgefield Farm

Monday, September 28th, 2009
Popcorn

Popcorn, rescued from Berkeley County, WV.


Kelly, rescued on Capitol Hill

Kelly, rescued on Capitol Hill

Those how have visited our farm know how much we treasure Kelly, our cockapoo and Popcorn, our Beagle mix.  Both were rescued, and through some wondrous quirk of fate, both ended up being integral members of our family.

So we couldn’t be happier to host the Animal Welfare Society dog and cat adoptathon here at Ridgefield Farm during PumpkinFest on October 3.  Several cats and dogs will be here looking for new homes from noon until 4pm.

Please join us and learn first-hand what others have said about the special gratitude pets who have been rescued and adopted show their new families.

Click here for more information about the Animal Welfare Society

Alan and Scott

Jonagold and Empire – a short apple primer

Friday, September 25th, 2009

Just in time for our opening of PumpkinFest Saturday, September 26, we have plenty of Jonagold and Empire apples.  Jonagold, for those of you not in the know, is a combination of Jonathan and Golden Delicious and great for eating and cooking.

Empire was developed from Red Delicious and Macintosh and is another versatile apple.

We still have some Honeycrisp and Gala on hand, so there’s plenty of variety for everyone.

Adding a little “soul” to the Corn Maze.

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

Maybe I’m a cheapskate, but I really like designing and cutting my own Corn Maze each year.  I know I could spend lots of money and have the Battle of Hastings or a portrait of Barak Obama designed professionally to fit my cornfield, with GPS coordinates provided and all that, but I’d still have to cut it myself. And don’t we already have enough digital in our lives?  So every year I make the decision to do it all myself…well, with a lot of help from the summer crew.  We all take ownership of the corn maze, and by the time we’ve finished sketching, measuring, cutting, running out of gas, sweltering in the July heat, we’ve got a corn maze with soul.

And one of my favorite corn maze devices is circles.  Not as mysterious as crop circles, mind you, but often just as baffling.  When a path through the corn maze comes to a circle, one is confronted with multiple options.  Some lead nowhere.  Others lead somewhere, but just not the right somewhere.  And yes, one is the right path. At Ridgefield Farm, our corn maze always has lots of circles.cutting-the-corn-maze

But for some insane reason, my circles have to be perfectly formed.  One kid stands in the middle with a tape measure, or rope, or sometimes a pole.  Another holds the other end tightly at just the right measurement and walks in a circle around the first kid, thus maintaining a perfect radius.  Cautiously, the person on the mower follows close behind.  Ah, yes.  Perfectly round!  Perfectly done!

Here’s a link to the largest corn maze in the world!

You think a corn maze is difficult to find your way through? Try making one.

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Don’t you just love to set off on a confounding path through a corn maze?  The twist and turns.   The false hopes dashed.  You’re cookin’ now.  You’ve gotten your stride.  Oops!  Drat!  Another dead end.  Now where was that turn I should have taken back there?

The corn is growing,  (about knee-high now, though we’re well past the 4th of July!), and it’s definitely time to cut the paths for this year’s corn maze before it gets too tall and way too difficult to cut.  We waited a bit too long once, and we found it very challenging and not particularly fun to chop our way through 5 acres of corn.

It’s hard for us to design our maze layout too far ahead, because when we do we often find Mother Nature sticking it to us again for trying to be efficient.  Thin patches of corn that will clearly not grow high enough to conceal pathways predictably fall squarely on spots where a complicated juncture or a needed connection is planned.

So now it’s time.  We can adjust our layout to accommodate those sections of recalcitrant corn.  But it’s still a daunting task.  Armed with graph paper, orange flags, and 300′ tape measures, we tromp all about the field double-checking each measurement, so the design we laboriously created on paper (and Excel spreadsheets!) can be transferred to a most irregularly shaped field.  This we do during July’s most inhospitable heat.

Is it going to be difficult enough?  Is it lame?  That’s always been my greatest worry each PumpkinFest at the farm.  Is everyone going to be able to race through it in 5 minutes?  This year, I think not.