Andover farmer Don Eveland got into the pumpkin business seven years ago. The Anoka County native thought peddling pumpkins would help his tour-farm business grow.
Turns out it was an opportunity ripe for the picking.
Last autumn, more than 12,000 people visited his family farm to pet animals, go on a hayride and pick the perfect pumpkin. That's in addition to the more than 3,000 schoolchildren who toured the farm as part of school groups and took home a small pumpkin to commemorate the visit.
The Eveland Family Farm opens to the public for the fall harvest season on Sept. 20, and Eveland said he anticipates healthy crowds this fall. Admission is $3 a person, including a hayride. Pumpkins are 29 cents per pound.
Eveland said he grows about 30 varieties of pumpkins and squash on the 100-acre farm, along with corn and grain crops to feed his 120 animals.
He aims to please all his patrons with a selection ranging from smaller pie pumpkins just right for small hands to large, round ones that are easily transformed into jack-o-lanterns with toothy grins.
"Some like the tall, skinny ones. Some like the fat ones," he said on a tour of his farm. "This one will be a jack-o-lantern pumpkin."
Eveland also grows a smattering of pumpkins in exotic colors.