October 15, 2005
IF GERALD BULL HAD GOTTEN HOOKED HE'D STILL BE ALIVE TODAY:
With Pressure and Perseverance, Pumpkins Do Fly: Virginia 'Chunker' Aims to Set Record (Michelle Boorstein, 10/15/05, Washington Post)
There once was a time when Ray Tolson thought the sport of "Punkin Chunkin" sounded as crazy as can be, when the notion of spending as much as $200,000 to build a 100-foot-long "gun" designed to fire a pumpkin nearly a mile seemed silly.Posted by Orrin Judd at October 15, 2005 8:21 AMBut that was another Ray Tolson, a Ray Tolson who didn't study air pressure and cloud speed in search of the perfect "air shelf" where an 8- to 10-pound pumpkin could sail perfectly. Who didn't commission university horticulturists to breed pumpkins that are precisely 9.5 inches in diameter, round and with a thick skin -- the perfect projectile.
With the World Championship Punkin Chunkin and a chance to best his world record of 4,434.28 feet less than three weeks away, Tolson, 61, was in his yard in Culpeper County on Friday, furiously fiddling with the gun. He said he has spent 5,000 hours building the glistening, black steel Second Amendment Too, which is why, he said, the grass has grown tall on his five acres, partially obscuring the half-dozen vehicles he used to spend his free time tinkering with.
"I haven't had time to mow," said Tolson, a small man who calls himself a high-tech redneck. "The point is to use the maximum G4 force on the pumpkin without destroying it."
His blue eyes twinkle.
A smile lifts his bushy, brown-and-gray beard.
"There's nothing like it!"
Tolson's fanaticism is hardly unusual in a sport that went from a casual fall contest 20 years ago among friends throwing anvils (then pumpkins, once their backs started hurting) to a $25-a-head event that draws 40,000 people and corporate sponsorship. This year, all machines are required to comply with American Society of Mechanical Engineers standards.
Any increase in bureaucracy hasn't hurt popularity.
Either that, or Israel would have been destroyed by a barrage of pumpkins.
Posted by: Robert Duquette at October 15, 2005 1:02 PMI have heard about potato cannons, but this is a little scary.
Posted by: Robert Schwartz at October 15, 2005 6:51 PMI saw a thing about this on PBS. These guys were talking the language of shooters. Guns call us.
Posted by: Lou Gots at October 15, 2005 7:54 PMI would have figured OJ for more of a trebuchet guy...
Posted by: Mike Earl at October 15, 2005 10:57 PMGreek fire.
Posted by: oj at October 16, 2005 9:39 AM