E-Newsletter
Fruit and Vegetable Magazine
Subscription Centre
HomeDiseasesPestsIn the FieldIndustryEye On Potatoes
  ABOUT US   |   CONTACT US   |   SUBSCRIPTION CENTRE   |   ADVERTISE   |   SITEMAP
MAGAZINE
Current Issue
Past Issues
News Archives
Web Exclusives
 
Twitter
MARKETPLACE
Classifieds
New Products
Horticultural Books
Job Board
COMMUNITY
Blog
Events
 
RESOURCES
Buyers Guide
E-Newsletter
Links
Sitemap
Ethnocultural Vegetables in Canada
 
WEATHER
Choose farm zone:
NORTHERN BC
CENTRAL QUEBEC
MANITOBA
NORTHERN ALBERTA
MARITIMES
SOUTHERN ONTARIO
SASKATCHEWAN
SOUTHERN BC
SOUTHERN QUEBEC
NORTHERN ONTARIO
SOUTHERN ALBERTA
NEWFOUNDLAND
powered by:
farmzonelogo
















Introducing Orange Bulldog
Written by American Society for Horticultural Science   
Move over Longface, Spooktacular and Trickster – there’s a new face in the pumpkin patch.

orangebulldogWelcome Orange Bulldog, a new variety of the familiar fall fruit that may soon be available to consumers and wholesale pumpkin growers. Researchers at the University of Georgia recently introduced the new, virus-resistant pumpkin, specifically developed for ornamental fall and Halloween displays.

Dr. Gerard Krewer from the department of horticulture at the University of Georgia’s College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, collected pumpkin seeds in remote areas of Brazil in 1996. The Brazilian seeds were then planted in laboratories, hybridized, and ultimately used to develop Orange Bulldog.

Dr. George Boyhan, assistant professor and Extension horticulturist at the University of Georgia and lead author of the study published in the October 2007 issue of HortScience , explained that the research team set out to develop a virus-resistant pumpkin with bright orange colour and an open cavity that would be suitable for Halloween carving.

According to Dr. Boyhan, Orange Bulldog seeds “consistently produced fruit during fall production, whereas commercial pumpkin cultivars often succumb to severe virus infections before fruiting.”

Although Orange Bulldog is not yet available to growers or the public, Dr. Boyhan’s team hopes that a commercial supplier will soon handle the seeds and make the new pumpkin available to pick-your-own pumpkin growers and consumers.

The complete study is available on the
American Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS) HortScience electronic journal web site .