BY USA RISSER W. CHESTER (Chester) Imagine a large, lucious globe hanging from a tree. You pick it and savor its sweet, fruity aroma. You take a bite. Peach flavors explode in your mouth as juice runs down your chin. There’s nothing quite like harvesting and eating fruit or veg etables fresh from the vine. Unless of course it is eating what someone else has picked only minutes or hours ago. This is the special attraction of Highland Orchards and operations similar to it. Highland, run by David, Bruce, and Alan Hodge and Stuart Const able, has been serving up farm fresh produce for three generations now, ever since the Hodges’ grandfather John Webster pur chased the property in 1941. The orchard is open year round with the first of the harvesting beginning in early May with rhu barb and asparagus. The harvest ing ends six months later with spi nach. In between are cherries, blueberries, peppers, sweet com, peaches, grapes, raspberries, tomatoes, strawberries, and more. Once the weather turns nippy ENERGY IS THE NAME OF THE GAME Get the most out of your dairy cows with Purina’s High Energy Team of Maxi-Tech " Products: MT 40% MT 32% FF MT 14% MTI6% MT 18% MF2O% MT22% All the above high energy products are formulated to help you put more milk in the tank! Give us a call today to leant more about how we can help you make more milk. 6 S. Vintage Rd. Paradise, PA 17562 (717)442-4183 (717)768-3301 * Registered trademark of Ralston Purina Company Year-Round Orchard Provides Nature’s Goodness and the harvest is all in, customers frequent the orchard’s retail shop for goodies such as honeys, jams and jellies, dried fruits, and nuts. In addition, there are fruit baskets available during the Christmas season, bedding plants, firewood, and freshly baked breads, pies, and other pastries. Big cash crop Apples are the big autumn crop, with 27 varieties being grown in the orchard. “The typical apple crop is 45,000 bushels with 15,000 harvested on a pick-your-own basis,” reported David Hodge, business manager for the orchard. “Half of all our apples are sold by November 1, with the remainder going into cold storage to be sold throughout the winter. The variet ies that don’t keep as well are sold first.” Those apples picked by the orchard employees are sold to retailers, made into cider, or sold in the retail store fresh or as baked goods. The apples are sorted according to size and condition with the most bruised apples going into the cider. “Some blemished fruit, however, is sold cut price,” said David. The ' . „ TM - Registered trademark of Purina Mills, kssMhis H. | PURINA CHDWSj Three of the four operators of Highland Orchards take a bite out of apples—one of the orchard’s biggest cash crops. From left, Stuart Constable, Alan Hodge, and David Hodge. Not pictured Is Bruce Hodge. idea being that housewives will use the fruit in cooking and baking. The blemished and fallen apples intended for cider are washed and have the leaves removed in prepa ration. They are cmshed by a machine into what resembles a thick applesauce. Next they are piped onto cheesecloth layered on Rt. 82 Unionvilte, PA 18375 (215)347-2377 ' ' ' ■ j,*,%*** i'i/i, Laneaatar Fanning, Saturday, Novambar 28,1988-A23 racks. Then they are crushed furth er by a press that applies up to 1,800 pounds of pressure per square inch. “The pressure has to be applied slowly,” warned Stuart Constable, production manager. “Fast pres sure bursts the cheesecloth and then the applesauce flies!” Haul Away With Winning Corn Hybrid. DK636 • Excellent yield for maturity, NCGA winner “cSEriCS -zszstzu •113-day relative maturity 0 ( Your Acres. SEE YOUR LOCAL DEKALB OR AGWAY REPRESENTATIVE FOR MORE INFORMATION SOYBEAN ROASTING ON YOUR FARM Don't Waste It - Roast It! This Little Piggy Went To Market, frA This Little Piggy Stayed Home, s 2 This Little Piggy Had... I II K ~TI ROASTED SOYBEANS ALLEN SUMMERS 703 E. Christine Rd Nottingham. Pa 19362 215-932-4761 The juices that are squeezed and filtered through the cheesecloth go into a storage tank and from there is bottled with no further filtering. “Our customers want thicker cider rather than something that looks like thin apple juice,” explained David. (Turn to Pag* A 27) igher Profits From All Grains, ig Improves TON, Destroys Mold. Toxins & Removes Moisture. CUSTOM GRAIN ROASTING DONE IN PA. & SURROUNDING STATES ~ DALE L. SCHNUPP RD6, Lebanon, Pa. 17042 PH: 717-865-6611 DAVID N. GROFF RD 1 Box 506 C Lewisburg, Pa 17837 717-966-3593