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Setting the pumpkin record straight

There’s no pumpkin shortage! Here’s how a few savvy media folks got the real Illinois pumpkin story out to the rest of the world. Even The Pioneer Woman world.

Holly Spangler, Prairie Farmer Senior Editor

October 23, 2020

2 Min Read
pumpkin pie, silverware and pumpkin on table
HALF-BAKED: Who doesn’t want pumpkin? “Everybody’s stress baking,” says Illinois Farm Bureau’s Andrea Casali. “It was banana bread back in March and April, and now we’re ready for all the fall things.” bhofack2/Getty Images

Can stress baking really lead to a faux pumpkin shortage?

Sort of. But it also led to an opportunity to tell the pumpkin story far beyond Illinois agriculture. Like, with The Pioneer Woman.

Earlier this fall, Andrea Casali, Illinois Farm Bureau media relations specialist, heard tales of over-eager fall bakers heading to the grocery store and finding an empty shelf where their favorite canned pumpkin usually sits. Like most reasonable people in 2020, they feared pumpkin might be the next toilet paper.

“We knew the pumpkin supply was normal, and we saw the opportunity to set the record straight,” Casali says, especially when a freelance writer for Allrecipes.com reached out.

Casali set up interviews with Raghela Scavuzzo, who works with specialty crops for IFB, and with Morton, Ill., pumpkin farmer John Ackerman.

Before long, the story was on allrecipes.com, with Scavuzzo proclaiming, “There is not a shortage!” She explained that the spring rains delayed planting and resulted in a slightly later harvest, and added that while it’s not a bumper crop, it’s still a good, normal pumpkin crop this year. Normal supply, no shortage.

The real problem may have been over-eager COVID-19 bakers, and who can blame them?

Scavuzzo says pumpkin harvest in Illinois usually starts in early September; this year it was delayed to mid- to late September, which created the illusion of a shortage on grocery shelves. As of mid-October, she says, processing pumpkins have been harvested and are at processing facilities now — and many are on shelves already. About 85% of the world’s canned pumpkin is packed in the Libby’s plant in Morton, Ill.

“There should be a steady supply for the season, unless people panic purchase. When people panic purchase, that can create an unplanned shortage,” Scavuzzo says.

Illinois Ag Facts infographic

Ornamental pumpkin sales are incredibly strong, Scavuzzo reports, despite COVID-19 regulations.

Those farms are another reason Casali wanted to get in front of the “pumpkin shortage” story. “If people think there’s a shortage of either ornamental or canning pumpkins, they might skip the U-pick farm. And we know farmers really count on those sales, so we needed to start talking,” she says.

Casali’s work is still getting mileage, a full month after the initial interviews were done — and that’s something in a fast-paced digital news cycle. The story even segued into another piece on aluminum shortage in Real Simple (spoiler alert: It’s not affecting pumpkin either). The initial story has been picked up on several sites, including Parents.com, Yahoo Lifestyles, Food and Wine, and even The Pioneer Woman.

For Casali, that last one might have been the sweetest: “You know you’ve made it when you’re in Pioneer Woman!”

 

About the Author(s)

Holly Spangler

Prairie Farmer Senior Editor, Farm Progress

Holly Spangler has covered Illinois agriculture for more than two decades, bringing meaningful production agriculture experience to the magazine’s coverage. She currently serves as editor of Prairie Farmer magazine and Executive Editor for Farm Progress, managing editorial staff at six magazines throughout the eastern Corn Belt. She began her career with Prairie Farmer just before graduating from the University of Illinois in agricultural communications.

An award-winning writer and photographer, Holly is past president of the American Agricultural Editors Association. In 2015, she became only the 10th U.S. agricultural journalist to earn the Writer of Merit designation and is a five-time winner of the top writing award for editorial opinion in U.S. agriculture. She was named an AAEA Master Writer in 2005. In 2011, Holly was one of 10 recipients worldwide to receive the IFAJ-Alltech Young Leaders in Ag Journalism award. She currently serves on the Illinois Fairgrounds Foundation, the U of I Agricultural Communications Advisory committee, and is an advisory board member for the U of I College of ACES Research Station at Monmouth. Her work in agricultural media has been recognized by the Illinois Soybean Association, Illinois Corn, Illinois Council on Agricultural Education and MidAmerica Croplife Association.

Holly and her husband, John, farm in western Illinois where they raise corn, soybeans and beef cattle on 2,500 acres. Their operation includes 125 head of commercial cows in a cow/calf operation. The family farm includes John’s parents and their three children.

Holly frequently speaks to a variety of groups and organizations, sharing the heart, soul and science of agriculture. She and her husband are active in state and local farm organizations. They serve with their local 4-H and FFA programs, their school district, and are active in their church's youth and music ministries.

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