Friday, February 12, 2010

Tree Count Through the Roof, and a Future Full of Fruit


The trees I ordered from Trees of Antiquity arrived. There were six: four apples, a cherry and a greengage plum. Additionally, I found a lady on Craigslist with several native hazelnuts for sale Apparently her neighbor has a gigantic 50 year old hedge and it has been sending up seedlings in her yard forever. I got five trees from her, and a couple of them were over twelve feet tall. All for twenty bucks, yahoo!

I'm not sure if I can take credit for these trees or not: Homero actually planted them. He hasn't had much work lately and so he's been catching up on farmwork. I sure appreciate it - planting eleven trees is no joke. I could have done it, but it would have taken me a hell of a lot longer and I would have been hurting a lot more seriously afterward.

The orchard really looks great now. It occupies a space about thirty feet wide by eighty feet long, adjacent to the eastern property line and running from the backyard out to the horse's pen. In that space are now eighteen trees, more or less in six rows of three, all semi-dwarfs. That leaves plenty of room to add in a tree here or there as the fever takes us. I can't imagine we will ever want more than twenty trees, assuming they all stay healthy.

Maybe I can see adding another nut tree - a walnut or two. I do love walnuts. But the six hazels theoretically ought to be enough to provide us with both nuts (highly storable protein) and oil (hard to come by here in the lands north of olive country and for smallholders without equipment to deal with canola or something like that). And now I have five apple trees, which likewise is theoretically enough to provide all our apple needs, from eating out of hand to drying, applesauce, and cider.

Our other fruit needs should be met by two cherries, three pears, two plums, and acres of wild blackberries. Within a mile of us we can get raspberries and blueberries in unlimited quantities.

I plan to put the beehives right smack dab in the middle of the orchard.

On the phenology front, at top is a picture of some adorable yellow crocuses I saw in Bellingham last Tuesday. My own crocuses are not yet up, but I am twenty miles north of Bellingham and at a higher elevation.

5 comments:

  1. Oh, I am jealous that you can already start planting and that there are green things growing nearby. We just had another 6 inches of snow. We haven't seen the grass here since before the holidays. Unusually snowy and cold here- something for me to keep track of for phenology! My apple trees are on order. I can hardly wait.
    Judy

    ReplyDelete
  2. Jesus Aimee, you act like fruit just grows on trees!

    Actually, I hope that you do plant some other nut trees, or that something grows that produces oil that you can use. Because hazelnuts are the dingleberries of the Devil.

    ReplyDelete
  3. what?! You are the dingleberry of the devil! (anyedge, not aimee)
    I thought the bees were going on the other property? You're going to put them right by your playground and trampoline? I know YOU'RE not afraid of bees anymore, but I am! When did you change your mind?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Aimee - I look forward to seeing photos of your orchard in the Spring, when in bloom. Of course, the trees will take a few years to really settle in before they shower you with fruit, but it will be worth the wait. All the best!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Keep posting stuff like this i really like it

    ReplyDelete

Due to huge amounts of spam which accrued over the year we were gone, I've decided to turn on comment moderation. Sorry for the bother!