| 'Bruce'
is ugly, but heftiness counts Eleven-year-old wins $2,000 prizeE
It wasn't a beauty contest.
Had it been a contest of looks, some cabbage other than "Bruce"
might have won the Giant Cabbage Weigh-Off on Friday night
at the Alaska State Fair.
Even its grower, 11-year-old Brenna Dinkel of the famous
cabbage-growing Dinkel family of Wasilla, admits that.
Just before the weighing began in front of the packed grandstands
in the huge Farm Exhibits barn, she pointed out one particularly
gooey leaf to her friends.
"Yuck," she said.
Credit the torrential rain that pelted Southcentral Alaska
this August for that, explained Gene Dinkel, Brenna's dad.
"We picked three of them, and that was the ugliest one,"
he said. "But it was the heaviest one too."
So Brenna named him Bruce.
How heavy was he?
"73.4 pounds!" announced Mike Campbell, the official
from the state Division of Weights and Measures chosen to
end all arguments, peering at the scales.
That made Bruce the leader up to that point out of 35 cabbages
and nearly nine pounds heavier than the next best thing, the
64.8-pound cabbage entered by Wasilla grower Steve Hubacek.
But there was one more entry left to weigh.
It was the handsome, flowering cabbage grown indoors by Colony
Greenhouse owner Scott Robb of Palmer, the same master gardener
who'd set a world record just two days earlier by growing
a 96.9-pound kohlrabi.
"I pride myself on how they look too," Robb said,
just before the weigh-in.
But the scales were blind.
They weighed Robb's cabbage at 65.2 pounds -- good enough
to win the second place ribbon and a $1,000 prize.
But Bruce was the winner, and Brenna Dinkel won the $2,000
first-place prize for the second year in a row. Last year
she won with an 85-pound cabbage. Barbara Everingham of Wasilla
set the state record in 2000 with a 105.6-pound cabbage.
Brenna credited her grandfather, Don Dinkel, for helping
her this year -- as well as a big fence that helped keep the
moose out.
And what will she do with her earnings?
Last year she invested part of the $2,000 in her personal
collection of plastic "Briar horses." This year,
she said, she plans to do the same.
Also emerging as a winner was Jarye Murphy of Wasilla, who
captured the Junior Division Cabbage Weigh-off and a $250
prize by growing a 49.2-pound cabbage. Second was Cody McQuillin,
at 47.6 pounds, and third was Thomas Van Diest (39.1 pounds).
While the rain played havoc with cabbages, it didn't damage
certain root crops and indoor plants that set records this
week. Among them were Robb's kohlrabi and five world records
by North Pole grower Dave Iles.
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