AG Genetics and Breeding
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Subject: Another dumb question......
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From
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Location
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Message
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Date Posted
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herbie |
Ray, North Dakota
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What does UOW mean? Any other acronyms a guy should know about in the pumpkin world? lol. Thanks.
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2/24/2006 8:42:08 AM
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Engel's Great Pumpkins and Carvings |
Menomonie, WI (mail@gr8pumpkin.net)
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Un Official Weight DMG= Damaged EXH= is a tricky one, some weigh offs allow a damaged fruit to be weighed, then give it the EXH. On others EXH means it was an exhibition fruit. Since I am allowed to only enter one pumpkin, I bring my second pumpkin along to weigh as an exhibition.
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2/24/2006 8:56:31 AM
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Engel's Great Pumpkins and Carvings |
Menomonie, WI (mail@gr8pumpkin.net)
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Ohh I forgot EST..Estimated weight meaning it was measured out and never weighed.
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2/24/2006 8:57:20 AM
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Tremor |
Ctpumpkin@optonline.net
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Like Shannon said, UOW means it was weighed but not at an official weigh-off with a certified scale. The weight is probably still accurate. Just not "official".
Ironically, when no abbreviation follows the weight-grower-year it IS an official weight.
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2/24/2006 9:15:30 AM
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herbie |
Ray, North Dakota
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OK so if I weigh my pumpkin at the grain elevator where I work, which is a state certified scale, and have my secretary notorize the scale ticket, is that official? Everything would check out, and I could have witnesses. But, not at the official weighoff if why it would get UOW. OOOOOOOOOOH, I answered my own question. DOH!
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2/24/2006 12:26:54 PM
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CliffWarren |
Pocatello (cliffwarren@yahoo.com)
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In my opinion (and that of most) if you weigh it on a certified scale and have a witness, it IS an official weight.
There is no consideration for an "official weighoff" other than if you want to be considered for GPC prizes, you'd need to be in a GPC weighoff.
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2/24/2006 1:27:02 PM
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Engel's Great Pumpkins and Carvings |
Menomonie, WI (mail@gr8pumpkin.net)
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Hmmm good question...We had one weighed on a grain elevator scale last fall and it weighed 1125 lbs..Being the honest grower I am I told them that the scale was wrong even though certified. Had it reweighed on a digital meat scale actual weight was 818.5..
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2/24/2006 1:27:14 PM
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CliffWarren |
Pocatello (cliffwarren@yahoo.com)
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This is a topic that we as growers should pay more attention to. I think many times we use UOW or EXH when we should use DMG. The DMG is important. That DMG (like it or not) must stay with the pumpkin for all time. History books will be written with DMG still tacked onto the name.
EXH, given the definition above, the EXH could probably be dropped at the end of the weighoff. If it's not damaged, and if it's weighed on a certified scale, it should be official. It just might not be counted for the prize structure in that particular weighoff.
EST is very important and should always be used when it applies.
UOW would fall to any fruit weighed, but not officially.
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2/24/2006 1:34:55 PM
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CliffWarren |
Pocatello (cliffwarren@yahoo.com)
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Wow, I'm surprized at the grain elevator mis-measurement...
Last year at the fair, we really don't have a proper scale here. He have one for regular sized fruits. It goes up to about 1000, but the platform is very small.
They also have a HUGE scale that can weigh your pickup and six horses all at once.
Last year they sent me to the HUGE scale. The weight came out to be 412. I protested (in a friendly way) as I thought the weight was rather light. So we went in to the produce section of the fair and used their little scale. It came out to exactly 412.
So, those HUGE scales can be accurate. On the other hand, they might not be.
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2/24/2006 1:40:10 PM
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herbie |
Ray, North Dakota
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Our scales are certified every year by the state, so they are accurate for commerce, so they should be appropriate for official weights, even for world records. I would rather weigh on a grain elevator truck scale than a small platform scale any day. If prizes aren't important to me, or I cannot drive the 250 miles to the weighoff, I will use it, and call it official.
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2/24/2006 1:51:13 PM
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Alexsdad |
Garden State Pumpkins
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gonna have to be an HO designation...herbie official!
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2/24/2006 3:38:17 PM
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herbie |
Ray, North Dakota
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heh heh. "The world according to herbie"
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2/24/2006 4:12:04 PM
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sam1962 |
Piqua,Ohio
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remember large truck scale such as elevator normally break on 20# increments but they can be set for whatever but ussually ar not set less than ten or up to 50. so if you use that type of scales it is official and certified but could be off ten pounds one way or the other depending on were the break falls they should be wieghed on scales that break on one pound increments such as pallet scales
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2/24/2006 5:24:55 PM
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Tremor |
Ctpumpkin@optonline.net
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Thank you Sam. When the grain elevator & junk yard dogs start paying the prizes, then their "certified" weights matter. Till then....
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2/24/2006 7:04:17 PM
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herbie |
Ray, North Dakota
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Prizes schmrizes Tremor. I'm talking about the people who CANNOT make the contests. We also have a beam scale that measure in increments of 1 lb. I am talking about recognizing someone like myself, who lives way away from our contest, possibly being recognized officially for a record, not a prize. If I feel it is something of significant weight, I would have to travel the 250 miles to the North Dakota weighoff, but I have fall harvest at that time. And by the way, your "certified" elevator might be one who sponsors your contests Tremor, because we would have the equipment to use for free, and some possible agronomy materials you may need later. Smartass. And the huge scales are state certified to be accurate guys, the one with the mismeasure couldn't have been working properly within state guidelines.
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2/24/2006 9:06:46 PM
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sam1962 |
Piqua,Ohio
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truck scales still break on twenty pound increments so they are not accurate to the lb but the beam scales would be just fine. I travel over 200 miles to the weigh off during harvest season too it only one day.
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2/24/2006 11:05:31 PM
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Total Posts: 16 |
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