By MARK BRANAGAN
Last updated
at 1:19 PM on 17th September 2011
It was enough
to bring a tear to every gardener’s eye yesterday as pensioner Peter Glazebrook
set a new record for the world’s heaviest onion.The monster
vegetable tipped the scales at 17lbs 15 and a half ounces - breaking the
previous world record of 16lbs 8.37 ounces held by John Sifford, of the West
Midlands, since 2005.
Prized possession: Gardener
Peter Glazebrook cradles his world record breaking onion
Peter, a 67-year-old retired
chartered surveyor, who lives near Newark, has broken ten world records in his
30 years of gardening.
He has been trying for the
honour of cultivating the world’s heaviest onion for 25 years but always missed
out until yesterday’s victory at Harrogate Flower Show.
Record is in the onion bag!
Peter Glazebrook and his wife Mary pose with his record breaking giant
onion
He said: 'I did not know the
exact weight until they put it on the scales but I had been measuring it every
day so I was very hopeful.'
Cabb fever! Derek Neuman from
Sheffield, grew this giant cabbage for the 100th Harrogate Autumn Flower
Show
Prize vegetables lose weight
if left on display overnight. So Mr Glazebrook waited until Thursday evening
before lifting the record breaking onion he had been cultivating since November
last year.
He then wrapped it carefully
in towels - to avoid it being bruised by potholes - before loading it into his
estate car for the overnight drive, arriving at the Great Yorkshire Showground
about 4am.
There was then a nail-biting
wait while dozens of rival entries were loaded onto the scales before Peter was
announced as the winner.
As well as the winning weight,
the onion was also found to measure 30ins in circumference and 24ins from top to
bottom.
He said yesterday: 'It has
taken me at least 25 years. I have been growing them for that length of
time.
'In that time, I have been
very close to the world record but it always escaped me. It is the same seed as
last year.
'But I have invested more time
and money into growing it including automatic venting and
heating.'
He also concentrated on a
batch of just 10 plants instead of his usual 50 to pick a winner.
He grew them in 150 litre
plant pots - big enough for a large tree - in John Innes Number 3 soil. 'I have
been talking to them for nearly 12 months,' he added.
'I always asked them if they
wanted more water and food.” He currently holds three other world records -
heaviest potato, heaviest parsnip, and longest beetroot.
Green with envy! Joe Atherton
from Mansfield, holds the marrow grown by his father at the Harrogate Autumn
Flower Show

Giant killers: Award winners
in the giant vegetable classes, (from left to right) Joe Atherton, Derek Neuman
and Peter Glazebrook
He continued: 'I have been
growing and showing for almost 30 years and 25 years with onions. My father
never showed but was a keen gardener.
'I feel so proud. I will take
it home, look after it, and put it down to seed.” It was far too valuable to
eat.
'If you did I should think it
could feed a thousand people. It would certainly do for a lot of
hotdogs.'
Balancing at: Glazebrook's record breaking
giant onion weighs in at 8.150kg setting a new Guinness book World Record
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