If you were planning on going to pumpkin patch this weekend, you might have fewer options. Record floods in the Snoqualmie area have put some farms underwater.

Jeremy Houston is with First Light Farm in Carnation. He says he’s experienced more than a dozen floods in his lifetime, but Tuesday’s flooding was different. When the river had breached water was dumping into the field—fast.

“It went from ankle deep to the top of my boots really, really quickly, in about 10 minutes,” he said.

Houston says he and his friend worked as quickly as they could to save farm tools and equipment. Soon they had to leave. They managed to grab a canoe.

“It was really surreal because the pumpkins from the pumpkin patch were coming down the river with me. So I’m floating down this road with pumpkins around me and I’m using the oar to break and keep from going into the slough channels.”

The floods have since receded, but things aren’t back to normal yet. “As of yesterday, the farm was still inaccessible except by canoe,” said Jane Reis, who owns the farm with her husband Don.