Carving his niche
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Bryce Alderton
Comments such as “that’s awesome” and “I could never do that” filled
the air Sunday as onlookers watched Mike Valladao transform an orange
squash into a symbol of patriotism.
And that was just the first one.
The San Jose resident, who has been dubbed the World’s Most Renowned
Pumpkin Carver, entertained many onlookers as he carved an eagle and
American flag into the first of two giant pumpkins during the Orange
County Marketplace’s fourth annual Trick or Treat Festival, held at the
Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa.
“Pumpkins appeal to everyone this time of year,” Valladao said while
dropping pumpkin peel on the ground. “This gets people’s attention. I do
it for the smiles and faces I see in the crowd.”
The eagle and flag Valladao carved surely appealed to 13-year-old
Austin Zapata of Costa Mesa.
Austin stood and watched Valladao carve stars on the flag for 15
minutes.
“I just like it because I like to draw,” Zapata said.
Valladao wanted to reflect America’s patriotism and encourage
Americans to move forward following the Sept. 11 attacks with the two
pumpkins he carved Sunday.
“People need to get back to business and get the country going to
where it’s supposed to be going,” Valladao said.
Valladao doesn’t draw a design on paper prior to carving, but rather
lets the pumpkin dictate what he will carve because each pumpkin has its
own shape and contour, he explained.
And he doesn’t use an extensive amount of tools; he mainly uses a buck
knife, or a folding hunting knife that has a three-and-a-half inch blade.
“If the pumpkin’s shape is elongated, then it will have an elongated
nose,” Valladao said, dressed in a pair of orange overalls and a straw
cowboy hat. “Each [pumpkin] is different; it’s whatever works for that
particular pumpkin.”
Carving giant pumpkins began 16 years ago when Valladao carved one for
a Sacramento area country club that was so impressed that it asked him to
do another one.
Valladao was growing them in his Sacramento yard at the time and
decided to make the best use of them.
“The pumpkins weighed more than I did at the time. I just carved them
and went on from there,” said Valladao, a product manager for a software
company.
Known internationally, Valladao and his pumpkins have appeared in
Japanese newspapers and USA Today, and on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.
In 1999, Valladao carved a 991-pound pumpkin, which was the largest
pumpkin on record in California.
When asked about all the acclaim, he said “I guess there’s not a lot
of people carving giant pumpkins. It’s an unusual distinction.”
Most of the pumpkins he carves are Atlantic Giant pumpkins that can
weigh 250 to 350 pounds. Each one takes Valladao about three hours to
carve.
Valladao gets his pumpkins from a variety of sources: the ones he
grows on his 2-acre yard in San Jose, from his uncle’s yard in Half Moon
Bay, and from Tom Borchard, a grower in Salinas. The latter were used
Sunday.
One of Valladao’s favorite designs were the two faces of presidential
candidates George Bush and Al Gore that he carved during last year’s
marketplace festival.
But on Sunday, all eyes were on the eagle.
Noah Delcore, a 4-year-old Fountain Vally resident, came dressed in a
green and gold dinosaur costume and was all smiles after watching
Valladao cut out some more pumpkin pulp from the eagle’s neck.
“That pumpkin is like 100 pounds,” Noah said, smiling and holding a
purple bag to use for trick-or-treating.
Marketplace vendors handed out candy to costumed children 12 and
younger on Sunday.
* Bryce Alderton is the news assistant. He may be reached at (949)
574-4298 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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