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The Rural Voice, 1990-09, Page 32W APPLE PICKING Anticipating the pleasures of the orchard at harvest by Sandra Orr e have an apple in front of us. It looks like a very green Cortland or, heaven forbid, a Spy — which I would cut and put in a pie with six or seven other apples or take the core out of and bake with brown sugar and raisins. It looks far too green to eat fresh. In fact, since I help out at an apple orchard and have many more appetizing vari- eties to choose from, I am not tempted to eat it in any case and I will set it aside, hoping the chipmunks will take bites out of it and save me the trouble. The man beside me, looking at the same apple, sees that it is round and green, and smells fresh, remind- ing him of young girls. But then he is of an age, having reached the autumn of his life, when almost everything reminds him of young girls. I bet he would bite into it right away and sa- vour it immensely, whereas I would turn it down even though I am no young thing either and starting, I know, to show usage. We leam later that it is a large, green Mac, a surprise to me, as 1 thought I knew a little about apples. You would not believe how par- ticular people are about their apples. Are the Ida Reds ready? If not, we will come back at another time. Can we get Delicious yet? When I tell them where to go in the orchard they wonder if thcy may pick them off the same tree they got them from last year. Yes, fine, I say, ever amazed that occasional visitors can find their way around the orchard. Since there are many varieties all ripening at different times during the season and planted in alternating rows, we who help run the orchard need to consult the map to see where the groups of trees are. One year there were so many deer in the orchard and they had nipped the trees back so severely that my father went to the local hairdresser's .. . Delicious are best eaten when they are properly seasoned. Just the other day, a man picked some to take back to the city. He too had a parti- cular tree in mind when he drove in the lane. He told me he had graded many of our apples for years. Most of the apples are picked into bins holding about 850 pounds of one variety and are sold to Versteegh Bros. of R. R. I, London. You must not pick a Spy, for example, until there has been a heavy frost. If it has snowed, the apples are even better. A little frost and rain or sleet improves the colour of these apples, which seem to keep well until far into the spring. One man told me how late he left getting Spies last year: it was almost November and there was snow on the ground, the apples cling- ing bravely to the tree. He pointed to the exact tree he hoped to get them from this year. You must not eat a Mcintosh when it becomes too ripe, for then it gets soft and even mushy, and there is many a better feast for us apple eaters. Though now as I write this story, having just eaten a Mac — like an old farmer, my husband says: cutting it and removing the core and slicing it — I can say the Macs are still good. Even the ones that have fallen to the ground are still fine. Of all apples, the Macs are the ones most difficult to keep, most difficult to grow well, and most difficult to receive good grades for. People tell me when they have picked a bushel or two from the ground at half price, hating to see them go to waste, how good they are. But they will not likely go to waste, for if they are not picked for juice, as the price might be too low, the mice will make free with them, as will the deer in the winter. One year there were so many deer in the orchard and they had nipped the trees back so severely that my father went to the local hairdresser's, begging for left- over hair to be swept up from the floor and saved. He put it in little gauze bags and hung them on the trees. I doubt if the hair bags kept the deer away. There are so many deer in the area. With so little snow in recent 28 THE RURAL VOICE