Self-proclaimed ‘world pumpkin capital’ — Half Moon Bay — hosts annual festival

The 44th annual Half Moon Bay Art and Pumpkin Festival took place this past weekend on Half Moon Bay’s Main Street. The self-proclaimed “World Pumpkin Capital” boasts dozens of local pumpkin patches, as well as a contest for pumpkins weighing over 1,000 pounds. The Main Street Beautification Committee founded the festival in 1971 to raise funds to preserve the historic downtown area of Half Moon Bay. The festival has helped pay $25,000 yearly maintenance fees for Main Street and generates local nonprofits an estimated $500,000 each year.

The festival, which ran from Oct. 18 to the 19, featured pumpkin-flavored everything from mac-and-cheese to ice cream. Pumpkins also inspired many of the artists and crafters who set up booths along Main Street. The festival ended with a screening of “Rise of the Giants,” a documentary about the 2013 race to grow the world’s largest pumpkin.

Author

  • Miranda Shepherd

    Miranda Shepherd received her B.A. with honors in Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity with a concentration in Identity, Diversity, and Aesthetics from Stanford University ('14). She's now the Program Coordinator at Stanford's Institute for Diversity in the Arts and a coterminal M.A. student in the Department of Communication with a Media Studies concentration. Miranda watches Netflix and calls it "research" for her thesis on television in the age of the Internet. She also writes plays.

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