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Wednesday 21 May 2014

The apple tree

This evening on Radio 3, we had a nice little talk on the tree which is just finishing its spring blossoming - and which is very much part of the traditional landscape of the West Country:

Apple

The Meaning of TreesSeries 2 Episode 3 of 5
Essay Three : Apple
The second series written and presented by Fiona Stafford, Professor of Literature at Somerville College Oxford, exploring the symbolism, importance, topicality and surprises of five trees common in the UK.
The Apple, which seems the most British of trees, cultivated in orchards nationwide, but actually originates in Kazakhstan. There are in the region of 7,500 cultivars of the Apple, and the apple seems to go back to the very beginnings of the human race - it's there in the story of Adam and Eve, as well as being important in Ancient Greek and Old Norse mythology. But the apple-tree that features in so many Renaissance paintings of the Garden of Eden is actually a descendant of the wild apple - or crab apple which is the only truly British apple.
BBC Radio 3 - The Essay, The Meaning of Trees, Series 2, Apple

The apple tree seems to be gaining some ground after years of decline.

Here's a story from last autumn:

250 varieties of apple on one tree... thanks to a bit of hard grafting over the years
  • Paul Barnett has been growing his 'family tree' for over 20 years
  • It is jam-packed with apples of all shapes, colours and sizes including rare cooking apples dating back to 1883
From Granny Smith and Golden Delicious to Brownlees Russet and Wadhurst Pippin, if you like apples then Paul Barnett is your man.
He has 250 varieties available to pick – and astonishingly, they’re all growing on just one tree.
The horticulturist has spent 24 years meticulously developing the tree in his back garden in Chidham, near Chichester, West Sussex, grafting on new varieties every winter.
Apple turnover:  Paul Barnett  in the apple tree in his garden in Chidham, near Chichester, West Sussex, on which two hundred and fifty different apple varieties grow
Apple turnover: Paul Barnett in the apple tree in his garden in Chidham, near Chichester, West Sussex, on which two hundred and fifty different apple varieties grow
Paul Barnett with apple tree
Laden: Paul has grafted 250 varieties on the 'family tree' over the past two decades
Paul Barnett and apple tree
Fruitful: There are 6,000 apple varieties worldwide and over 2,000 different types kept at the National Fruit Collection in Kent
The tree’s fruits now include rare cooking apples such as the Withington Fillbasket, which originated in 1883, and Eady’s Magnum, from 1908, as well as more recognisable favourites.
250 varieties of apple on one tree... thanks to a bit of hard grafting over the years | Mail Online
BBC News - Man grows tree with 250 varieties of apple

Cider is also growing in popularity:

Fruit-flavoured cider sales grow 80% in a year

Ciders with flavours such as elderflower and berry become UK's fastest growing alcoholic drink sector with market worth £113m

, consumer affairs correspondent
The Guardian,
Cider glasses
The arrival of pear and fruit ciders has doubled the value of the total UK cider market in four years. Photograph: Garry Weaser

Sales of fruit-flavoured cider have soared in the past year to make it the UK's fastest growing alcoholic drink sector, figures reveal. Since being launched in the UK three years ago, fruit ciders such as elderflower and lime, berry fruits and even cloudberry from Scandinavia have grown in popularity and number, with about 30 varieties now on offer.
Marketeers have succeeded in turning the drink from a summer-time tipple into an all-year-round drink. In the past year sales for home consumption have soared by 80% to create a market worth £113m a year, according to new data from the retail analysts AC Nielsen. The arrival of pear and fruit ciders in the mid-2000s has more than doubled the value of the total UK cider market in just four years to £873m, it said...

Fruit-flavoured cider sales grow 80% in a year | Life and style | The Guardian

Sidmouth has its own cider business - doing very well and winning prizes:
Futures Forum: Annings: award-winnning fruit cider from Sidmouth

And there are regular apple-events:
Futures Forum: Apple pressing at the Knapp Saturday 5th October

Friends of the Byes have created a community orchard - in flower this last fortnight:
Friends of The Byes / Sidmouth BEE Project | Facebook


Brosen_fruittree_flowers.jpg

The Benefits of Urban Orchards | Permaculture Magazine
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