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Pumpkin Smashes​

2025 Pumpkin Smashes:​

See the SCARCE website for the map of all locations and to search by zip code​. Smashes in an near Kane County ​are listed below.

All Events Listed Below are on Saturday, November 8th, 2025​ from 9am until noon, unless otherwise noted!

  • Aurora: ALDI Corporate Campus (1245 Corporate Blvd.)

  • Elgin: Hawthorne Hill Nature Center (28 Brookside Drive), and Elgin High School (1200 Maroon Drive), and  Advocate Sherman Hospital (1425 N. Randall Road)​

  • Geneva: Community Gardens at Prairie Green (west side of intersection between Bricher and Peck Roads)

  • Hampshire: Henpeck Park (995 S. State Street)

  • St. Charles: ​St. Charles Department of Public Works (1405 S. 7th Avenue)​

  • Bartlett: Saturday, Nov. 1, 9-11am,​ Metra Parking Lot (140 E. Bartlett Avenue)​

  • Naperville: ​Peterson Elementary School (4008 Chinaberry Lane)

  • Oswego: Prairie Point Community Park (4120 Plainfield Rd.)

  • Warrenville: Friday, Nov. 7, 9am-2pm, Parking lot of Park District Office (3S260 Warren Ave.) 

  • West Chicago: New Hope United Methodist Church (643 E. Washington Street)

Whole month of November: drop your pumpkins, gourds, corn stalks and leaves off for free at the Pushing the Envelope Farm compost pile located at 1700 Averill Road in Geneva.


What's a Pumpkin Smash?

Since 2014, the DuPage County-based non-profit​ SCARCE has been working with Chicago-region municipalities, community groups, educators and others to coordinate post-Halloween pumpkin collection ev​ents called pumpkin smashes. The goal of these events is to send the collected pumpkins to composting facilities so that they can be transformed into valuable compost instead of going into landfills. 

Photo of a cute jack-o-lantern pumpkin in a compost pile with grass for hair

Why Compost Pumpkins?

Pumpkins are 90% water! Also, the nutrients that make pumpkins healthy to eat (potassium, calcium, magnesium) are also important plant nutrients. Why not return all that good stuff to nature by composting? In landfills, pumpkins decompose without oxygen releasing the potent greenhouse gas methane.

Graphic with a spooky jack-o-lantern saying "in the landfill it's plain, I am still just making methane"


Best Practices for Composting Your Pumpkin

Carving: ​If you are carving a pumpkin and need to get rid of the "guts" before pumpkin smash events happen, many municipal waste programs allow residents to mix food scraps in with yard waste. See more about the best practices for curbside composting programs here. You can als​o store pumpkin guts in the fridge or freezer and then bring them to a smash event. Also, roasted pumpkin seeds are a healthy, easy and tasty snack! 

Preservatives: If you want to treat a pumpkin or jack-o-lantern to make it last longer or to discourage squirrels, soak it in a relatively harmless/safe chemical like dilute vinegar instead of a toxic one like bleach. Please do not use sealants or epoxies on any pumpkins that will be composted. While often relatively non-toxic, these products contain polymers (plastic). Pumpkins sealed with resin or epoxy put microplastics into compost.​

Paint: ​If you choose to paint your pumpkin and compost it, tempura paint is the best choice because it is the most biodegradable. While relatively non-toxic, latex paint and acrylic paint contain polymers (plastic). Pumpkins with these paints on them can cause microplastics in compost. Spray paint contains toxic solvents and is the least desirable paint to use on a pumpkin for composting​.

Stickers, Appliques, Lights and Candles: Any plastic stickers or appliques like googly eyes, gems, vinyl stickers, wigs, etc. should be removed, as should wax candles, battery powered LED candles, and any other light-making device.​