Seasonal & Holidays
5 Things About Pumpkins Before Visiting Patches Near Falls Church
What to know about pumpkins before visiting the best fields near Falls Church this fall.

FALLS CHURCH, VA — Pumpkins, and the upcoming fall season, are now on the minds of many in Falls Church and the Northern Virginia area.
With trips to local pumpkin patches and fields already in the works, it might be a good idea to brush up on everything pumpkin-related before heading out to the biggest pumpkin farms near Falls Church.
Here are five things you may have been wondering about pumpkins:
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1. How They Grow
It’s not only large pumpkin fields that produce the orange, fall-time tradition. Pumpkins can be grown in regular backyards, too, but only if there’s enough space.
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Pumpkins are often referred to as a “garden gorilla,” gardening experts at HGTV said in a guide on how to grow pumpkins. The vines of the large plants sprawl and expand throughout the growing season, much like watermelons. They grow quickly, and can take out other plants if not contained.
Backyard gardeners have been known to tuck the pumpkin plants along the edges of a vegetable garden, although some let their pumpkin vines ramble across the yard.
2. Where They Grow
The U.S. Department of Agriculture says six states — Illinois, California, Indiana, Michigan. Virginia and Texas — are responsible for 40 percent of pumpkin acres harvested. Together, they average between 4,700 and 5,600 acres of pumpkins a year, according to the USDA. Illinois tops the list of pumpkin-producing states, harvesting about 10,900 acres in 2019. The other states among the top six have all averaged between 4,700 and 5,600 acres per year.
3. Best Pumpkin Patches In Virginia
A Reader’s Digest article posted earlier this summer has listed their picks for the best pumpkin patches in every state. In Virginia, Reader’s Digest has listed Chesterfield Berry Farm in Moseley as the best to visit.
The opening weekend at Chesterfield Berry Farm is Sept. 18-19. The hours will be 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. The last hayride to the pumpkin patch leaves at 5:10 p.m. Chesterfield Berry Farm is located southwest of Richmond in Chesterfield County.
Planning a longer fall trip? A “Drive The Nation” blog posted a few years back shows five of the biggest pumpkin farms in the United States: The Great Pumpkin Farm, Clarence, New York; Cool Patch Pumpkins, Dixon, California; Peanuts Pumpkin Patch Express, Bryson City, North Carolina; Frey Farms, Keenes, Illinois; and Craven Farm, Snohomish, Washington.
4. Pumpkin Patches Near Falls Church
Northern Virginia and the D.C. area have several pumpkin patches to visit this fall. One of the biggest is Cox Farms in Centreville, which will be open from Sept. 18 to Nov. 7.
5. The Halloween Connection
As pumpkins are often turned into jack-o’-lanterns after they are picked from the patches and fields, some may wonder why they have been so closely associated with Halloween.
Pumpkins are often carved into jack-o’-lanterns after they are picked from the patches and fields, but how did they come to be so closely associated with Halloween?
The practice of decorating jack-o’-lanterns actually began in Ireland, according to History.com. The name jack-o’-lantern cones from an Irish folktale about a man named Stingy Jack. Irish immigrants brought the tradition to America, where it became interwoven with other Halloween festivities.
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