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Way OT

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Jimmy King

08-22-2006 09:02:29




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Bought a 5 lb. bag of Red Delishes Apples a couple of weeks ago for less than $5 some were good most pretty sad, bought 8 Fugi's Sat. $1.79 per LB 3 lb's, just pealed the first to put in my lunch box it was pretty sad. I would like to buy some good apples again!!!! WalMart usually has a good slection but their apple section stunk Sat. bought the fugis at the gro store. WalMart had more bags of the Red Delishes they looked pretty sad. May have to quit eating apples. Several years before Alice died she had started peeling my apples after I had bit into a rotten one or two in the dark while driving, they would look good on the out side. Sorry I just needed to vent. Jim

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spitz

08-22-2006 20:12:59




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 Re: Way OT in reply to Jimmy King, 08-22-2006 09:02:29  
Honeycrisps are ok but if you see some honeygolds - try em i guarrantee you wont be sorry. The are green but sweeter than honeycrisps to me. They are the favorite in both my orchards. Fireside is also a great tasting huge apple! These should be out in sept!! Get to SW MN I could share some with ya!



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Cue P.

08-23-2006 09:39:42




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 Re: Way OT in reply to spitz, 08-22-2006 20:12:59  
Actually the honey crisp is a cross between the honey gold and a macoun i believe. The hoeny gold is cross between the honey and a golden delicious. Havent had the oportunity to try honeygolds but we did plant some Candy Crisps this past year - will have to wait a few years to see how they are tho.



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spitz

08-23-2006 09:57:40




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 Re: Way OT in reply to Cue P., 08-23-2006 09:39:42  
is candy crisp the same as snowsweet- the new u of minnesota release?



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Cue P.

08-23-2006 14:12:03




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 Re: Way OT in reply to spitz, 08-23-2006 09:57:40  
I think they're two different varieties. I havent looked into Snow Sweet yet but will now! There was an antique "Snow" apple so i wonder if they crossed it with something.



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buickanddeere

08-22-2006 19:58:27




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 apples Re: Way OT in reply to Jimmy King, 08-22-2006 09:02:29  
Where can you find a real old fashoned Spy Apple any more. With the exception of some abandoned farm orchards we walk through deer hunting. I haven't seen a Spy Apple in a grocery store for 15-20 years. There is a couple of hybrids, Empire if I recall are about as close as one can find. Those fuji apples are very good too and faintly resemble a Spy as well.



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Cue P.

08-23-2006 09:37:14




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 Re: apples Re: Way OT in reply to buickanddeere, 08-22-2006 19:58:27  
Dont know where your at but my friend grows Northern Spy's at his place near Plymouth MA. Got some folks like you who come specifically for the old varieties like the spies, russets, baldwins etc.



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Dave 2n

08-22-2006 11:48:15




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 Re: Way OT in reply to Jimmy King, 08-22-2006 09:02:29  
My experience has been that you might be kind of between seasons right now. The last of last year's cold storage might still be in the sotres and the new crop hasn't quite hit the market yet.



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noncompos

08-22-2006 10:50:27




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 Re: Way OT in reply to Jimmy King, 08-22-2006 09:02:29  
Even out here in more or less apple country buying apples from stores is a hit or miss situation; we have Nature"s-type stores that have good apples, always ID"d as to source, worth the extra price. At the same time I"ve had good luck with store apples, if you note which ones are acceptable; some stores apparently have pickier fruit buyers than others. But, as everyone sez, there"s nothing like the flavor of one ripened on the tree.

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Billy NY

08-22-2006 10:22:02




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 Re: Way OT in reply to Jimmy King, 08-22-2006 09:02:29  
I always wondered how you could enjoy these things all year, apples, tomato's etc. I guess this why people canned and preserved things.

It sure is nice to be in an area with orchards, in this area of NY there are quite a few. The side hill next the house, all of which was once pasture, probably 15 acres, overgrown for years, has all kinds of wild apples, some of which are really good, others although full size can be slightly bitter, picking them at the right time has a lot to do with it. I just lost a wild one with sweet apples next to the house, was in the way of my new pole barn, so I caefully dug around it with the hoe, got a pretty big rootball, transplanted it into a nice wet hole, also where the rain and run-off heads before it goes down the hill, no go, turned brown and died even with watering, going to miss that one, was right where a post was too, would have built around it had I known, one tree worth keeping. At least I have plenty of others. What I am waiting for is the pears on the 2 trees in the yard, they have been fantastic the last few years, have a beautiful apple, forget the variety, but the darn mate to it was knocked over by a storm or something years ago, need to cross pollinate it, but there is a sapling shoot that I have been nurturing to come back for a few years, so maybe I'll have a mate for it again.

Tough one if you like apples and not in an area where they are grown, I miss the fresh picked ones in the off season, that and garden tomato's, something terrible, good stuff no doubt !!!

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Cue P.

08-22-2006 09:41:19




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 Re: Way OT in reply to Jimmy King, 08-22-2006 09:02:29  
Not to be too harsh, but serves you right for buying your fruit from Walmart in the first place ;) Dont know where you are but North American Red Delicious and Fujis are no where near ripe (both are October apples in MA) so they probably came from either long term storage (ie last years crop) or some foreign country. Next time, if possible, treat yourself to apples from a local stand or better pick your own. You"ll appreciate the difference i guarantee it. And for better results, stop buying red d"s and fujis (yuck), my suggestion is HoneyCrisp (a September apple) if you can get them.

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Jimmy King

08-22-2006 12:35:44




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 Re: Way OT in reply to Cue P., 08-22-2006 09:41:19  
Thirty miles from the closest orchard and I doubt they have any apples out. I do not like a tart apple, so a lot of the apples I don't like. I have never seen honeycrisp. and the better of the apples I bought was from WalMart.



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Cue P.

08-22-2006 14:09:54




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 Re: Way OT in reply to Jimmy King, 08-22-2006 12:35:44  
Jimmy, if you like mildly sweet with a lot of flavor, yet crispy and juicy, try and find some honeycrisps. Plus they keep real well. I kept two bushel in my friends cooler from sept to february and they never got mushy or lost their taste. Its a relatively new variety but asked your local orchard guy. I drive 50 miles to a friend of mine's farm every sat and sun from sept thru nov to help him with his pick your own operation. Folks cant get enough of them honeycrisps!

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Dachshund

08-22-2006 09:40:41




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 Re: Way OT in reply to Jimmy King, 08-22-2006 09:02:29  
Wife and I are peeling apples for pie right now! We got lucky and had an apple tree in the pasture when we bought the place. It is now about 65 feet from the house we moved in. We have no clue as to what variety they are, but the thing is LOADED. We've put enough for about 2 dozen pies in the freezer so far, and have feed several dozen to the goats. I'm planning on going out to pick some more this evening.

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rhouston

08-22-2006 09:37:52




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 Re: Way OT in reply to Jimmy King, 08-22-2006 09:02:29  
I only like to eat apples I pick from my trees. any apple older than 1 week has lost it's flavor as far as I'm concerned. The spys will last a little longer though. There is nothing like a sun warmed apple straight from the tree.



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JT

08-22-2006 09:23:10




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 Re: Way OT in reply to Jimmy King, 08-22-2006 09:02:29  
I am spoiled, I guess, will not eat a lot of fruit unless I buy it from the orchard, the stuff they sell at stores normally are picked green, ripened during shipment, and if they sit too long, they get over ripe and really nasty. We are lucky, there are peach and apple orchards within a 30 minute drive from me.



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