Seasonal & Holidays
White Pumpkins: What To Know Before Visiting Smyrna Area Patches
For a ghostly jack-o'-lantern, search for a white pumpkin in the fields and patches around Smyrna and Vinings this fall.

SMYRNA-VININGS, GA ā Orange is the color that has been most closely associated with Halloween and the pumpkin patch season in Smyrna and Vinings every fall. But pumpkin enthusiasts have noticed the increasing popularity of white pumpkins as they search local fields for the best of the crop ā the perfect choice for a ghostly jack-oā-lantern.
White pumpkins were viewed more as an accident of genetics, or a rare novelty, until the early 21st century, according to a number of blog posts on the subject. Since around 2000, however, theyāve become a popular sales item as more and more white pumpkins are grown intentionally.
Itās quite possible more than a few of the albino pumpkins, often referred to as ghost pumpkins, will pop up at visits to pumpkin patches and fields this fall in or near Smyrna and Vinings.
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Read more: Where To Find The Best Pumpkin Patches In Smyrna-Vinings
While the differences between white pumpkins and the traditional orange ones may seem striking at first, there are fewer than many may think.
Find out what's happening in Smyrna-Viningsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Both white and orange pumpkins grow on long trailing vines as members of the Cucurbitaceae family, the farmers market app Specialty Produce states.
The lifestyle blog āNew Life on a Homesteadā points out that not only are white pumpkins as edible as orange pumpkins, white pumpkin can substitute orange pumpkin in nearly all recipes.
The biggest difference, the blog noted, is that some studies have suggested due to their pale coloration, white pumpkins have fewer vitamins than their orange counterparts. Thereās not enough research to solidly back up that claim, however, according to the blog.
Itās possible that some albino pumpkins have the same amount of vitamin A and other carotenoids, ābut itās likely they have less,ā SuperFoodly.com, an Amazon service, noted.
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