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Friday, 29 September 2017

Green Acre #72: The Perfect Fruit Tree

Source: mylittlebird.com --- Thursday, September 28, 2017
Photo by Stephanie Cavanaugh. THINKING OF planting a fruit tree this fall, an Apple an apricot maybe a pear—or even a fruitless fruit, like a cherry? Don’t do it. Peaches. I’ve been there. Fair warning. Yes, it’s fall, and the people who plant are urging you to do so: Give those roots the comfort of still-warm soil and then settle in for the cool, moist winter, they coo. And you have that urban farm-to-table hunger. Longing to say, “Of course, Millicent darling, I picked the apples just before you and Sebastian pulled up. Try them with the Morbier and another sip of prosecco—divine.” Please, no! Had I just listened to my younger self, cackling as I sat reading Henry Mitchell’s wonderfully amusing columns on my fire escape-balcony in Adams Morgan. (It was an extraordinary perch, by the way, stuffed with pots of flowering annuals and offering a spectacularly unexpected view of the Washington Monument). Mitchell, also known as The Earthman, was the gardening guru of the Washington Post from 1970 until his death in 1993. On the subject of fruit trees he said: “He who plants fruit trees is engaged in fools’ work . . . fouling the air with poisonous sprays and attracting wasps to the carpet of rotting fruit that invariably comes along in a few years . . . ” Ha ha ha, I laughed at the fools, Why of course you can’t and shouldn’t plant fruit trees in a city patch. Snort. This was before The Prince and I bought a house that came complete ...



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