Dixon, California – The owners of the giant North California maze once crowned the world’s largest visitors to remember that there is fun in loss.
“It is confusing,” said Tyler Cole, whose family has a cold pumpkin. “When you are in the atom, everything looks as it is until you go on the bridge and you love,” wait, all the way here. I thought I was there. “
The pumpkin and the maze of the atom along the 80th highway between Sacramento and San Francisco are open again for the autumn season through Halloween. In 2007 and again in 2014, Cool Patch Pumpkins got a place in the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest maze of atom in the world.
The maze – which is spreading more than 40 acres – requires at least 45 minutes to complete and characterize five different bridges that allow maze pioneers to rise above the legs. It is also known for the complex designs that the team creates in a maze that can be seen from public expenditures. This year’s maze celebrates farmers. The previous seasons honored the heroes and the first respondents with giant murals in the design of the maze.
“Everything is done by hand,” Cole said. “We want to connect something fun and exciting, then build our paths about it.”
In the afternoon recently, visitors were wounded near and far on their way through the maze.
“I have no feeling of guidance, and we can spend all day here. That’s good. We have water. We will survive, three days,” said Ryan Moore, who was visiting Hawaii.
Likewise, Chelley Tang from Redwood City, California, has always been a corn to eat if lost.
“My children have a better feeling towards me, so I will follow them,” she said.
The maze of corn in Quebec, Canada, as well as those in Minnesota and Illinois, are also proud of standards, either by area or miles.
Behind the maze, Cool Patch features an atom bath for young children full of 150,000 pounds of dried corn.
Copyright © 2025 by Associated Press. All rights reserved.