
What the valley had that nowhere else in Alaska did was light. Through the long summer the sun stays up some nineteen hours a day, and in the rich glacial-silt soil the crops simply do not stop growing. The result is the stuff of legend and of fact both: cabbages the size of wagon wheels and pumpkins that take a forklift. The Alaska State Fair, held in Palmer since 1936, turned that quirk into a tradition, and its giant-vegetable weigh-offs still draw record-breakers and crowds every Labor Day, including a cabbage that topped 138 pounds, among the largest ever grown.
The colony itself was a hard, uneven thing, and the honest version is the better one. Of the 203 families, perhaps a third had little real farming experience; the first years brought mud, mosquitoes, supply shortages, and a famously tangled bureaucracy. Some families thrived and some gave up — a fair number returned south within a few years, and by the 1960s only about twenty of the original 203 remained on their tracts. But enough stayed to make it work. They cleared land, raised the big trussed barns, built a church and a school and a railroad-depot town, and proved that a farm community could hold on in the Matanuska Valley.
Why People Visit Palmer
Palmer offers something rare in Alaska — real farm country, set against glaciers and peaks. Visitors come for the colony heritage and the State Fair, stay for the Hatcher Pass alpine and the Musk Ox Farm, and leave understanding why this one valley, under all that summer light, became the place Alaska grows its food.