
FROM PUMPKIN PATCH to pop-up roadside stands and elsewhere, pumpkins are popping up everywhere just weeks away from Halloween.

I love the pops of color these seasonal stands add to the landscape, setting the mood for October and the fun festivities the month brings.

Growers gather in the pumpkins, heaping them atop wagons for ease of display and purchase.

Buying is made easy with secure drop boxes, pay on the honor system via cash, check or Venmo. I love the trust the sellers place in the buyers.



I love, too, the signage, art and seasonal decorations which draw customers to stop and shop for pumpkins and often other goods like squash and mums.

It all feels so good and earthy and connective, this buying direct from the grower who seeds, tends, harvests, markets. Locally-grown at its most basic.

I love, too, how rural pumpkin stands pop up next to cornfields and occasionally sunflower fields. Sunflowers make me smile with their bright yellow blossoms. Sort of like thousands of smiley faces beaming happiness upon the land.

All these pumpkins placed for purchase prompt memories of Halloweens past. Of pulp and seeds scooped from pumpkins. Of pumpkins carved into jack-o-lanterns with toothy grins. Of jack-o-lanterns set on front steps and candles extinguished by the wind. Of pumpkins buried in drifts of snow in the Halloween blizzard of 1991 which dropped up to three feet of snow on parts of northern Minnesota and somewhat less here in southern Minnesota, but still a 20-inch storm total.

Pumpkins represent more than a prop or seasonal decoration. They represent nostalgia, stories, the past, the present, the timelessness of tradition. Those are the reasons I can’t pass a pumpkin stand without feeling grateful, without remembering the childhood Halloween when I clamped a molded plastic gypsy mask onto my face or the Halloween I fingered cow eyeballs (really cold grapes) at a party in the basement of a veterinarian’s home or all the years I crafted Halloween costumes for my three kids.

Then there’s the year I helped my father-in-law harvest pumpkins from his muddy patch in the cold and rain so he could take them to a roadside market in central Minnesota. Because of that experience, I understand the occasional challenges of getting pumpkins from vine to sale.

I appreciate the growers who are offering all of us the beauty of autumn, the fun and fright of Halloween, and the gratitude of Thanksgiving with each pumpkin grown, picked and placed for sale at a roadside stand.
TELL ME: What does a pumpkin represent to you? Do you buy from roadside stands or elsewhere? I’d like to hear.
© Copyright 2025 Audrey Kletscher Helbling

This is the one thing I love about fall—- all the pumpkins and displays. They are everywhere, aren’t they?
And it’s finally beginning to feel like autumn here in southern Minnesota.
these kind of displays always get me excited for halloween and remind me of my childhood and even taking my own kids to pick out pumpkins to decorate. when I was teaching we would take our class to a local farm and pick out pumpkins from their pumpkin patch for the kids to take home along with one for our classroom, and they were so excited!
I can just picture you with your kids. No matter one’s age, picking out a pumpkin is simply plain fun.
it was always so fun, we went on the bus and took lots of parents. we all had a great time. p.s. I figured out why I couldn’t reply to your posts, but it’s still a bit odd. for some reason, wp made me resubscribe to your post. ))
My eldest always enjoys chaperoning whenever she can. She volunteers a lot at her kids’ school. So proud of her giving heart.
Technology can be frustrating sometimes. I have yet to figure out why I can no longer comment on a dear friend’s blog. I’ve given up at this point.
I love going to school shows and event and chaperoning. especially now that I’m not teaching.
yes, the tech can sure be frustrating. might I suggest try unfollowing your friend and reflowing? might be worth a try.
Thanks for the tech tip. And thanks for continuing to be involved in education. You’re the best!
it’s fun to be a helper in a different way. when I wasn’t able to respond to your blog, I realized that wp had somehow unsubscribed me for no reason.
Fall is a festive time of year. I love the pumpkins everywhere…(not so much all the Halloween decorations).
I appreciate both. But, yes, a festive season for sure.
I love a good pumpkin and those knucklehead pumpkins are cute. I didn’t know that they had a name so thank you for sharing that bit of info. I am ready to start baking the pumpkin treats.
The name “knuckleheads” was new to me also. 🙂