It was another busy weekend and
after taking my son to his rugby training I decided to swoop by my Mum and
Dad’s house to quickly help hoover up their excess of apples and pears. Typically
it started pouring with rain about half way through the short journey but I was
prepared as the forecast had predicted a downpour anyway.
We filled a big bucket with
cooking apples and a few pears that I managed to reach. It’s a really huge old
tree but being wet and slippery, I didn’t fancy sending my son up it wearing
his rugby boots.
As we were returning through the
driving rain, I remembered a couple of trees by an industrial estate in
Chandlers Ford and stopped off to swiftly grab a few more big juicy apples. My
son chose to stay in the car at this point. I then realised that we had, so
far, only collected cooing apples and racked my brain to think of a tree with
an abundance of sweet eaters that would be easy to pick and not too far out of
our way.
The Flemming Park Reds! I thought, in a flash of inspiration, and quickly picked out a route that took us past
the place where we had first started picking apples about three
or four years ago.We were not disappointed; the trees in the swimming pool car
park were absolutely loaded. I parked the car directly under the trees, got the
big blue bucket out of the boot and started picking. I must have filled it in
about ten minutes, which is just as well because it was still raining hard.
All In all I think it must have
taken us about half an hour to fill the two big buckets with fruit. This load was pressed into juice a day later, because the Flemming Park Reds are soft and do not keep well. It was a real rush-job; I had only an hour or two of light after coming
home after work.
I used the stainless steel spade
method for expediency and then smashed them to pulp with my trusty cherry tree branch. I then topped up my latest batch with the two gallons of sweet
pink juice to the five gallon mark. I also filled a couple of bottles with
juice for the fridge and still had a gallon left to fill a demijohn. I really want
to try Pasteurising apple juice, so that we can keep it longer for the children
(and adults), who absolutely love it.