Hello
There are few things that scream fall more than sweet potatoes, fresh apples, and apple cider. Apples are such an interested crop too. Above is a photo of Rich Eshleman and I walking through his orchard. Those are apple trees believe it or not. Read below to learn about vertical shoot positioning and apple growing "technology."
And on the orchard, not all apples "grade out" for perfect eating apples. That's when you press cider, which is why we have apple cider this week. This product is pressed with a mixture of apples - this week its honeycrisp, jonathan, cortland, gala, macintosh, ginger gold, and a few fuji - and treated with a UV sanitation device. This "pasteurizes" the product without cooking it. It will still get good and fizzy after a few weeks, and with a bit more sugar and brewer's yeast, you can make hard cider.
And believe it or not, but at least it makes a good story, David Yoder has a moon schedule that dictates when to harvest sweet potatoes. This age-old technique hasn't failed him yet, so I'll try to explain rather than understand the science behind it.
MORE NEWS THIS WEEK
Winter Season Registration Open: details can be found HERE on our website. Just 5 more deliveries for the Summer Season and then we transition into the Winter Share (starts the first week of November and runs through May).
And this week, Carnivore Shares are officially available on the website.
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Last Call BLTS: There is one quick meal that defines summer for me - BLTs. And fellow Fresh Forker and friend Beth DN reminded me this past weekend that "BLT Season" is almost over.
So this week, we have a kick-butt special - BLT combos for just $20. Includes: 1# nitrate free bacon, 1 loaf farm fresh whole wheat bread, 1 package homemade mayo (8 oz), heirloom tomatoes and lettuce. Approx enough for 5 to 6 sandwiches. Based on our bread and mayo batch sizes, only 50 are available. Order yours online today.
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Two Pies to Chose From. This week we have two delicious pie options:
1) Concord Grape, lattice top, pie. Sweet and tart, the sticky good concord grape filling is quite unique. This week we had just a few pecks of grapes left in the kitchen, so we made a partial batch. (pictured right)
2) Crumb Top Apple Pie. Fall spices compliment this hefty pie. I think you can count a slice as 1 of the "5 a day" on fruits and veggies. Maybe.
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The Lifecycle of the Orchard
This is going to be a tough article to write - not because I can't write to it, but rather where to stop!
I just got off the phone with Rich Eshleman. I have to apologize to anyone who tried calling in the customer service line. Allyson had to shut the door to her office. I'm a loud talker - perhaps shouter - and Rich is really hard of hearing. And his truck is loud, and he's older, and he holds his phone on speaker phone and physically moves it between his mouth and his ear, depending on if he is talking or listening. You know what I'm talking about.
Rich has been in the orchard business for a while. He graduated from OSU with a degree in horticulture and orchard management, and after working at a few orchards, eventually acquired his own land in Clyde, OH (near Sandusky). That was 1989, and today his orchard looks much different than it did then.
To understand some of the compare and contrast below, here are a few starters:
Orchard Maintenance - includes pruning the trees and staking the branches, thinning the trees (removing excess fruit), mowing, trimming, and managing pests
Harvest - is manual and requires a lot of labor
Grading - not all fruit is considered a #1. #1 fruit is the largest fruit and free of physical imperfections. #2 grade fruit might have scabbing, bug damage, or be misshaped.
Fruit is not produced on year 1. Orchards are a long term investment and the land is tied up for years on end.
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What is Vertical Shoot Positioning
Modern orchards are grown similar to a vineyard. There are posts driven at the end of long rows of trees. A high tensile steel fence wire is stretched from post to post and pulled tight. The trees are specifically selected for this type of setup - they are often "dwarf" varieties that are "grafted" to a root stock selected for the climate and soil types.
Root Stock - the root system selected for the apples. They are selected based on climate zone, soils, disease resistance, winter hardiness
Apple Variety - the variety - such as honeycrisp - is spliced onto the rootstock. This is called grafting.
The main stalk, or center lead stalk, is positioned up between the fence wire to hold it up. Cordons, or lateral side shoots/branches, are positioned along the wire as a trellis to support them. The lower branches are longer and the top branches shorter. As Rich says, the ideal tree is "shaped like a Christmas tree." It's fat at the bottom and narrow at the top. The reason is that most fruit bears at the bottom.
In this system, all maintenance - from pruning to thinning - can be done at ground level without ladders. It is much faster and safer.
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Compare and Contrast: The Benefits of Vertical Shoot Positioning (VSP)
"Traditional" orchards - the ones you see in nostalgic magazines with large trees loaded with fruit, kids and dogs walking the rows picking apples - are planted on a grid of "40 square."
That means that each tree is planted in a 40 ft by 40 ft box. That's 1,600 square feet per tree. Each acre is approx. 45,000 square feet. That means about 30 trees per acre.
Trees per acre: Modern VSP orchards have trees every 6 feet, and each row planted 12 feet on center. Each acre has 1,000 trees compared to 30.
The most visible benefit of VSP is that all the work can be done on the ground. It is faster, safer, and easier to harvest. But does the money add up? As Rich says to everything, "if you can find the help to get the work done..." the results speak for themselves.
Yield per acre. While each tree only yields 1 to 2 bushels on VSP compared to 20 to 30 bushels per tree on a traditional orchard, the density of trees makes up for it. With VSP, there are about 1,000 trees per acre - about 1,500 bushels - compared to 30 trees on a traditional orchard, about 900 bushels.
Time to Harvest. Further, a VSP orchard can be harvested on Year 2. Traditional orchards are planted and maintained for approximately a decade before harvest is achieved. 2 years vs 10 years.
In general, about 8 people can harvest an acre in a day. 1 experienced harvester can pick 100 bushels of apples; if they are large and heavy, up to 200 bushels in a day.
Grade Outs. Apples are graded based on color, size, and perfection. With VSP, more sun exposure is possible, improving the color and ripeness of the apple. Further, the plants can more easily be thinned, making for larger fruit. Lastly, monitoring pests and disease pressure is easier and faster to correct.
Rich is averaging 70% #1 fruit on his VSP. This is compared to 50% with a traditional orchard. The market for "cider apples" is less than it used to be, so the VSP matches the modern consumer demand.
And the weather. Rich is keen on waiting as long as possible to harvest. Sunny days and clear, cold nights make the best apples. The apples convert starch to sugars to prevent from freezing. Each variety has a different ideal time. For example, right now honeycrisp and gala are picking good; goldrush and melrose mature much later near snowfall.
Some varieties don't do great in Ohio. Red delicious, for example, blooms early. This means it is at risk of late spring freezes, which are much more common in Ohio than Washington state. In the last 50 years, consumer demand has shifted to pretty, easy eating apples. The red delicious was a game changer in the 1960s and its growing conditions allowed for Pacific Northwest growers to stand out and dominate the apple industry.
With VSP, as new varieties are available and root stock that is better adapted to our climate, the NEO grower is more easily able to adapt to changing consumer demands and keep a foot in the race, so to speak.
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Here is a drawing Rich put together for me that explains a little more about how his orchard is planted.
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There are plenty of "old wives' tales" in farming. For example, plant your peas on St. Patrick's Day - if the ground is workable.
One of them that David Yoder goes by is the moon schedule for planting and harvesting sweet potatoes. It is said to plant things that go underground - like sweet potatoes - when the moon is either not visible or at least waning away. That one is easy to remember for me - plant things that grow in the dark (like underground) when it is dark.
For harvest, David waits to harvest until after the Harvest Moon - this year, it was Sept 10. This is generally the last full moon before frost for us. There is a good chance we'll have frost by the next full moon, Oct 9. With the clear skies lately, the low temperatures south of Lake Erie have touched into the low 40s already.
Last week when David dug the potatoes, the moon was waning away. For those informed about astrology, this also relates to the "elements." September is part of virgo - an earth element - in contrast to waiting until after the next full moon, which goes into scorpio - a water element. It is said that sweet potatoes harvested now keep longer than those later. From an astrology point of view, harvesting during a water element could mean the plant and root is wetter, resulting in a tuber that would rot.
Side Note: Size of sweet potatoes. David is packing 3# bags. That's really hard because sweet potatoes vary wildly in size, many potatoes being up to 3# on their own. If he would grade out and sell only the perfect mediums, there is no way he could afford to grow sweet potatoes. We try to pack so that the range of potatoes isn't too different but be prepared for some larger and some smaller sweet potatoes.
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Still Time To Join this Season - Prorated
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The Summer Share is winding down, just 5 more weeks!, but there's still time to join in.
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Small Omnivore
Ground Chicken
Sweet Potatoes
Apple Cider
Purple Broccoli
Celery
Candy Onion
Green Peppers
Apples - Gold Delicious and Jonagold
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Small Vegetarian
Sweet Potatoes
Apple Cider
Purple Broccoli
Celery
Candy Onion
Green Peppers
Apples - Gold Delicious and Jonagold
Acorn Squash
Green Beans
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Mini
Sweet Potatoes
Purple Broccoli
Celery
Green Peppers
Apples
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Large Omnivore
Ground Chicken
Sweet Potatoes
Apple Cider
Purple Broccoli
Celery
Candy Onion
Green Peppers
Apples - Gold Delicious and Jonagold
Brussel Sprouts
Garlic
Grape Tomatoes
Pork Sirloin Roast
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Large Vegetarian
Sweet Potatoes
Apple Cider
Purple Broccoli
Celery
Candy Onion
Green Peppers
Apples - Gold Delicious and Jonagold
Brussel Sprouts
Garlic
Grape Tomatoes
Acorn Squash
Green Beans
Lettuce
Heirloom Tomatoes
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Small Vegan
Sweet Potatoes
Apple Cider
Purple Broccoli
Celery
Candy Onion
Green Peppers
Apples - Gold Delicious and Jonagold
Acorn Squash
Green Beans
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