Crops Lifestyle

The world’s largest monuments to crops and livestock

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From towering fruits to colossal sculptures, the world’s largest food crop and livestock attractions captivate visitors with their impressive size and cultural significance. These monuments celebrate various crops’ rich heritage and economic importance across different regions.

Here’s a list of some of some of the biggest statues that have been dedicated to foods and the farms that produce them:

The World’s Largest Pistachio

Location: Alamogordo, New Mexico

Standing 30 feet tall, the trademarked World’s Largest Pistachio at McGinn’s Pistachio Tree Ranch pays homage to the region’s thriving pistachio farming industry. Tim McGinn, the ranch’s owner, initially said he wanted to honor the memory of his father, who founded the pistachio and grape farm. 

New Mexico, California, and Arizona produce 100 percent of all the commercially grown pistachios in the world, with $16 million contributed to Arizona and New Mexico. While trees grow up to 33 feet tall, pistachio nuts are typically about an inch long and half an inch in diameter.

Image by Kristi Blokhin, Shutterstock

The World’s Largest Cow

Location: New Salem, North Dakota

Salem Sue, the World’s Largest Holstein Cow, stands prominently above Interstate 94 near New Salem, North Dakota. Erected in 1974 by the New Salem Lions Club to promote local Holstein herds, this 38-foot-tall, 50-foot-long fiberglass sculpture quickly became a popular roadside attraction. Inspired by the success of the World’s Largest Buffalo in Jamestown, North Dakota, Salem Sue was built to honor area dairy farmers and their high-quality milk production. The statue, visible from five miles away, cost around $40,000 to build and was funded by local dairymen, farmers, and businesses.

Constructed by Sculpture Manufacturing Co. of LaCrosse, Wisconsin, and directed by artist Dave Oswald, Salem Sue highlights the agricultural heritage of the region. She serves not only as a promotional tool for local dairy farming but also as an educational symbol, teaching visitors about animal husbandry and rural life. 

Typical Holstein cows stand about 58 inches tall at the shoulder, making Salem Sue a true giant of her kind.

World's Largest Cow
Image by JWCohen, Shutterstock

The World’s Largest Pecan

Location: Seguin, Texas

The saga of the world’s largest pecan began in 1962 when a dentist built a 1,000-pound, five-foot-long pecan in Seguin, Texas, in honor of Spanish explorer Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca. This pecan held the title until 1982, when Brunswick, Missouri, built a 12,000-pound, 12-foot-long replica of their patented Starking Hardy Giant pecan.

Despite Brunswick’s reminders, Seguin continued to claim the title. In 2011, Seguin finally unveiled a new 16-foot-long pecan at the Texas Agricultural and Heritage Center, reinforcing that everything is bigger in Texas.

Texas pecan growers produce about 60 million pounds of pecans annually. While the nuts vary in size, the original this replica was modeled after are generally 1.5-2.5 inches long. 

World's Largest Pecan
Image by Paul Juser, Shutterstock

The World’s Largest Chile Pepper 

Location: Las Cruces, New Mexico

Near Hatch, New Mexico, in Las Cruces, stands the world’s largest chile pepper, stretching over 47 feet in length at the Big Chile Inn and Suites. This vibrant sculpture, made from concrete and steel, celebrates the area’s agricultural prowess and cultural identity. Created by local artisans and engineers, it is a testament to the community’s deep-rooted connection to chile farming and its flavorful contributions to global cuisine.

New Mexico is the nation’s largest chile pepper producer, making about 53,300 tons of chile in 2022. Green chiles grown in New Mexico vary from 5 to 12 inches in length.

World's Biggest Chile Pepper


The World’s Largest Peach

Location: Clanton, Alabama

Known as the “Peach Capital of Alabama,” Clanton is home to one of the world’s largest peaches, which stands over 130 feet tall. The Big Peach, is actually a giant peach-shaped water tower that’s become a well-known symbol of the city.

Painted to resemble a peach with vibrant colors, a stem, and a leaf, it has become a popular tourist attraction and a symbol of Clanton’s agricultural heritage. Built by the Chicago Bridge and Iron Co., it resembles the Gaffney Peachoid in South Carolina but is slightly smaller, standing 15 feet shorter and holding 500,000 gallons of water.

Peaches vary in size, but the average diameter is 2.6 to 2.8 inches. 

World's Biggest Peach
Image by Mccallk69, Shutterstock

The World’s Largest Potato

Location: Idaho

Originally launched in 2012 to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Idaho Potato Commission, the truck’s immense popularity transformed it into a yearly tradition and a pop culture icon. This 4-ton potato travels the country promoting Idaho potatoes. Alongside its promotional mission, the truck supports small charities through its A Big Helping program. 

In total, the truck weighs 44,320 pounds, and would have taken 7,000 years to grow (if it was a real potato), and would offer up 20,217 servings of mashed potatoes. Even though this potato is a big one, Idaho tops the leading potato-producing states with over 145 million cwt of potatoes in 2023. 

Russet potatoes typically weigh 5 to 10 ounces and are 1.5 to 2.25 inches in diameter. 

World's Largest Potato
Image by The Famous Idaho Potato Tour

The World’s Largest Peanut

Location: Ashburn, Georgia

Although many towns boast large peanut monuments, the King of Giant Peanuts reigns supreme from its cylindrical brick perch along Interstate 75 in Ashburn, Georgia. This iconic symbol, designated the Official Peanut Monument of Georgia by state law, cannot be obstructed from public view.

The original monument, erected on February 15, 1975, was designed by A.R. Smith, Jr. and dedicated to Nora Lawrence Smith. Despite being knocked down by Hurricane Michael in October 2018, it was rebuilt in steel and restored to its original spot in June 2023. 

Georgia grows nearly half of the peanuts produced annually in the U.S., over 2 billion pounds yearly. Peanuts that include the pods are typically 1 to 2 inches long. 

World's Largest Peanut
Image by sillyamerica

The World’s Largest Apple 

Location: Colborne, Ontario

The world’s largest apple, located just east of Toronto, is a notable attraction. This 35-foot-tall apple, built by Vout Welding of Cobourg, is part of a pie factory, restaurant, souvenir shop, and small amusement park. Visitors can enter the giant apple and enjoy a view from the observation deck. The site offers a unique experience, blending dining and entertainment with a quirky, oversized fruit theme. As a fun bonus, the venue also sells apples, adding to its charm and appeal.

Canada produced 380,571 metric tons of apples, which make up for almost 40 percent of the country’s total fruit production. Apples range in sizes from 2.25 to 3.75 inches in diameter. 

World's Largest Apple
Image by eskystudio, Shutterstock

The World’s Largest Orange

Location: Kissimmee, Florida

In 1971, Orange World in Kissimmee, Florida, opened its first gift shop on Highway 192. In 1984, the shop was transformed into a 60-foot-tall orange. As of May 2023, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported that Florida was expected to produce 16.1 million boxes of oranges, second only to California’s 45.1 million boxes.

Oranges are generally about 2 to 4 inches in diameter, but navel oranges range from 3 to 4 inches. 

World's Largest Orange
Image by Bradley GT, Shutterstock

The World’s Largest Ear of Corn

Location: Olivia, Minnesota

A 25-foot-tall corn monument stands on Highway 212 atop a gazebo, welcoming travelers to the state’s top corn and soybean production county. Erected in the summer of 1973, the monument commemorates Olivia as the birthplace of modern hybrid seed corn production and the “Corn Capital of the Midwest.” Recognized by the World Record Academy, it holds the world record as the largest ear of corn.

Minnesota is the third-largest producer of corn in the U.S., harvesting over 8 million planted acres in 2022. An ear of corn is usually 6.75 to 7.5 inches long.

World's Largest Ear of Corn
Image by Olivia Chamber of Commerce

The World’s Largest Pumpkin 

Location: Roland, Manitoba

In Manitoba, you’ll find the world’s largest pumpkin. The giant squash replica weighs 1,684 pounds, stands 12 feet tall, and measures 12 feet wide. Constructed from steel rods and covered in orange fiberglass, it was created in 1990 during the Roland Centennial to honor Edgar VanWyck, the “Pumpkin King.” VanWyck and the town of Roland earned a place in the Guinness Book of World Records for growing the largest pumpkin in the world in 1977. 

Just last year, Canada harvested 10,686 acres of pumpkins. Pumpkins over 25 pounds are considered giant, but VanWyck’s pumpkin reached 570 pounds. 

World's Largest Pumpkin
Image by Gordon Goldsborough, Manitoba Historical Society

The World’s Largest Tomato

Location: Leamington, Ontario

Designed in 1960 and built in 1961 as a collaborative effort between the HJ Heinz Company of Canada Ltd. and the Town of Leamington, the Big Tomato is located near the Heinz factory and has served as a tourist information booth for nearly six decades until 2019. The 20-foot replica of a tomato represented the town as the tomato-producing capital of Canada and the home of the annual Tomato Festival. 

In 2024, Leamington officials opted to put $50,000 toward the structure’s restoration.

In 2022, there were 528,277 tonnes of tomatoes produced in Canada. Round tomato varieties range from about 2 to 3 inches. 

ontario-largest-tomato
Image by space-man, Flickr
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