Halloween Pumpkin Carving
Since my friend John bought me a white pumpkin from a pumpkin patch in Caledonia, Mississippi for Halloween, I decided that this year I would actually carve a pumpkin. Every year we talk about carving one but thus far it has not happened.
This is how I did it, well this is how John, Nikki and I did it:
- I placed the pumpkin on an old towel and found a pencil and a permanent marker to draw his face. I was told this is not the first step and that I should cut the stem first but I didn’t want to do it that way.
- Next, I drew the face on my white pumpkin with the permanent marker because I thought it would be easy and didn’t need the pencil. I failed. So with Nikki laughing at me, I turned the pumpkin around and started over.
- I began cutting around the stem with the largest knife I could find, because it made sense to me that I needed the largest knife in my kitchen. Under the advice of my friends I (a.) started using a smaller serrated knife and (b.) faced the blade away from my face. (Side note: White pumpkins smell like cantaloupes when you cut them.)

Use a serrated knife to carefully cut around the pumpkin stalk.
- Next I began to pull on the stalk. Nothing happened even though I thought I was pulling really hard. Nikki took the knife away from me and ran the knife around the stalk to make sure it was cut all the way through.
- Nikki was right.

The orange triangles are from the first face i tried to draw.
- Next, I used a spoon and pulled out all of the pulp and seeds. The seeds I set aside because we plan on toasting them tonight. The pulp went to the compost bin. Our worms got a Halloween treat too.

Now he needs a face.
- I finally cut his face. This took way longer than it should have until John told me that Turby had mentioned that a pairing knife would work better. He didn’t tell me himself because he had already offered some advice to which i replied “I don’t want to do it that way.” Sometimes I make things harder than they are supposed to be.

My Jack-O-Lantern is smiling or maybe yelling.
- After his face was cut, I added a soy candle which was leftover from my recent wedding. The soy candle I used is supposed to burn for 12 hours, which cuts down on the amount of candles I will use to amuse the trick-or-treaters and the amount of chemicals the candle will release while burning.

I added a soy candle which can burn up to 12 hours.

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Comments
3 Comments on Halloween Pumpkin Carving
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on Fri, May 20th 2011 @ 5:15 pm
[...] We put in leaves, egg shells, coffee grounds, tea bags, any table scraps (except meat) and the pumpkin I carved for Halloween. It is really gross inside the compost [...]
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on Fri, May 20th 2011 @ 5:15 pm
[...] We put in leaves, egg shells, coffee grounds, tea bags, any table scraps (except meat) and the pumpkin I carved for Halloween. It is really gross inside the compost [...]
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A Beautiful Mess
Bleubird Vintage
SkunkBoy Creatures
Turby and John
Amber Oswalt
on Wed, Nov 11th 2009 @ 2:02 pm
Hey! I want to start a compost pile! How can I do that?