Giant 289g strawberry declared largest on record after almost a year on ice | World News

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A farmer in Israel has entered the Guinness World Records after he grew the largest strawberry on record.

Weighing in at 289g, it has been declared the world’s largest after Chahi Ariel spent a year farming it.

The strawberry was picked on Mr Ariel’s family farm near Netanya in central Israel in February 2021 and has been stored in a freezer since.

Israeli farmer Chahi Ariel holds a strawberry weighing a whopping 289 grams (over half a pound) in Kadima-Zoran, Israel, Thursday, Feb. 17, 2022. The titanic berry this week was declared the world’s largest by Guinness World Records. The strawberry was picked on Chahi Ariel’s family farm near the city of Netanya in central Israel in February 2021. But only this week, Guinness confirmed it as the heaviest on record. Ariel says he stored the berry in his freezer until getting the news. (AP Photo/A
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The fruit weighed in at 289 grams

“We waited for a year for the results. We kept it in the freezer for a year. It’s no longer as pretty as it was,” Mr Ariel said.

The strawberry is a local verity called Ilan, that tends to grow to a hefty size and Mr Ariel said the record setting fruit has shrunk to about half the size it was a year ago.

A strawberry weighing a whopping 289 grams (over half a pound) is on display in Kadima-Zoran, Israel, Thursday, Feb. 17, 2022. The titanic berry this week was declared the world’s largest by Guinness World Records. The strawberry was picked on Chahi Ariel’s family farm near the city of Netanya in central Israel in February 2021. But only this week, Guinness confirmed it as the heaviest on record. Ariel says he stored the berry in his freezer until getting the news. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)
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Mr Ariel’s strawberry was grown on his family farm in central Israel

The previous record was a strawberry grown in 2015 in Fukuoka, Japan, that tipped the scales at 250g.

Mr Ariel said he jumped up and down, laughing and singing when he got the news.

“We are very happy to be in the Guinness World Records,” he said.

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