Autumn Harvest 2020, a visit to the orchard with my 90 year old mother

I recently took my 90-year-old mother to visit the community orchard just outside Ringmer. We had been invited by Katharine , who met us there and helped me to manoeuvre my mother to the apple-laden trees, where she sat in her wheelchair. It was a beautiful sunny Autumn morning and it was a joy to see my mother's delight just to be out among the fruit trees. All through my childhood she had talked of the orchards of Kent, where she grew up. She mourned the disappearance of varieties like Beauty of Bath, Lemon Pippin, and Russet and lamented the flavourless substitutes.  Katharine brought various different apples to show my mother, telling us their names - Orleans Reinettes, First and Last, Falstaffs and many more. And then she introduced the tree right in front of us and covered in huge shiny, red apples straight from a fairy tale. Newton Wonders - my mother's favourite. We polished up three smaller ones and placed them in her lap. Her delight as she crunched her way through all three in succession was palpable. 'Now that's what I call a real apple!'.  'There should be an orchard for every community. I've always thought so’ she told me afterwards. Thank-you Katharine for a wonderful day among the fruit trees. DS

Wassail

On the 6th Jan we gathered at the Orchard as it was getting dark and hung lots of little lanterns through the trees and set up a table with cups and some warm mulled orchard apple juice. Once it was dark the orchard looked really pretty and we wassailed together with the fantastic help of Valmai and Lewes folk musicians and wassailers. Valmai explained some of the history of wassailing, how it was often a way in lean times for poorer folk to get some food and was that a whole range of products might be ‘wassailed’, not just apples. Sometimes the ceremony used to include putting a small child up in the tree. We chose one apple, one pear and a plum tree to wassail and command to provide a good healthy crop for 2019 and each tree had two party poppers blasted at it using the splendid ‘blunderbuss’ which you can see in the picture. This only shoots party poppers and nothing else but looks quite magnificent.

Wassail at Ringmer Community Orchard 2019

Clearing nettles

To make it easier to harvest and to cut the grass, we pulled out huge quantities of nettles that were growing around the plum trees.  It seems that you just have to look away for a few weeks and there are more coming up. They were very high and and we had to be careful to stop them falling in our faces as we pulled them out.  I managed to get a large nettle in my face the previous week which stung my nose and I was keen to avoid that again.  

We also carefully went through the grass growing around the plum trees and cut down the plum tree suckers that had come up. These are mini plum trees that pop up around the established  trees and the stems are too tough for the streamer or mower.  Its a slow but useful job.  

This is one of the piles of nettles we removed but I think we must have cleared about 5 more barrow loads over the course of a couple of hours. 

A wheelbarrow full of nettles and plum tree suckers

A wheelbarrow full of nettles and plum tree suckers

Harvest time

Today we harvested many of the apples before the wind and rain due tomorrow and I took them over the Ringden Farm in Flimwelll.  With a car loaded and the weight hopefully fairly well balanced, I set off for the long drive  through  Horam, Burwash and Etchingham.   The picture is of the bin where the apples go waiting to be pressed  at Ringden. This batch is a mix of Lord Derby, Lord Lambourne, Adam's Permain, a few Crawly Beauty and Red Falstaff apples.  

These will be pressed, bottled and pasteurised and then be ready for sale.

Apples waiting to be pressed

Springtime at the Orchard

 In early March before the trees came into blossom we clipped little cement weights on the thin new growth branches. It looks a strange sight with the trees covered in little weights, a little like a group of alternative Christmas trees, but the weights serve an important purpose.  

Weights on trees

The branches naturally grow very upright, especially on the Ashmead Kernel variety.  By weighting the branches down a little the tree will grow so its easier to pick the fruit and more air and sunlight get through the middle of the branches. This helps the fruit to ripen and for the trees to be healthier.  Also when a branch is more horizontal, there is a change in the hormone produced and the new growth buds are more likely to be fruit buds instead of leaf buds.  So, by using these weights we are helping to make sure we get  good harvest later in the year. Linda has taken a great close up photo showing how the weights are made up of a peg, a small loop of wire and the cement block. 

Weights on the branches

We met up at the Orchard last Sunday and took down the weights so so carefully so as not to damage the blossom.