Startups

Delaware has a Punkin Chunkin deadline

If a Sussex County site isn't found by May 1, the World Championship will move out of Delaware.

A Punkin Chunkin cannon in 2008. (Photo by Flickr user Nick, under a Creative Commons license)

World Championship Punkin Chunkin Association has decided it would rather keep the Punkin Chunkin tradition alive somewhere else than let it die a Delmarva tradition.

The Cape Gazette reports that Delaware has until May 1 for a local landowner to provide a site that’s at least 600 acres. Once that deadline passes, the Association will begin looking for a site elsewhere in the United States.

https://www.facebook.com/WorldChampionshipPunkinChunkin/posts/2384801158238725

The event, which started small in Lewes in 1986, grew to a huge, high-tech event in Bridgeville by the ’10s, with logistics so complicated that only one event was held since 2013. That event, in 2016, was marred by the serious injury of a producer for the Science Channel, a major sponsor of that year’s event. The Science Channel pulled its sponsorship and the event has yet to recover.

For information about site requirements, contact the association at info@punkinchunkin.com.

Read the article on the Cape Gazette here.

25% to our goal! $25,000

Before you go...

To keep our site paywall-free, we’re launching a campaign to raise $25,000 by the end of the year. We believe information about entrepreneurs and tech should be accessible to everyone and your support helps make that happen, because journalism costs money.

Can we count on you? Your contribution to the Technical.ly Journalism Fund is tax-deductible.

Donate Today
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Trending

The person charged in the UnitedHealthcare CEO shooting had a ton of tech connections

The looming TikTok ban doesn’t strike financial fear into the hearts of creators — it’s community they’re worried about

Where are the country’s most vibrant tech and startup communities?

What a new innovation index tells us about Delaware

Technically Media