Thursday, September 21, 2023

Our local apple orchard just announced that Jonathan apples will be available September 30th here at the local farmer's market. Other varieties later in the fall.

 



There are two alternative theories about the origin of the Jonathan apple.

The first is that it was grown by Rachel Negus Higley, who gathered seeds from the local cider mill in Connecticut before the family made their journey to the wilds of Ohio in 1796, where she planted them. She continued to carefully cultivate her orchard to maturity and named the resulting variety after a young local boy, Jonathan Lash, who frequented her orchard.

The other, more accepted, theory is that it originated from an Esopus Spitzenburg seedling in 1826, on the farm of Philip Rick(s) in Woodstock, New York. Although it may have originally been called the "Ricks" apple, it was soon renamed by Judge Jesse Buel, President of Albany Horticultural Society, after Jonathan Zander, who discovered the apple and brought it to Buel's attention.

I'm believing the first story.  And anyone named Rachel Negus Higley had to be red headed.


3 comments:

  1. I was always told they were from Jonathan "Johnny" Appleseed.

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  2. My friend in Julian CA is busy helping to get the farmstand ready for the apple season there.
    -WDS

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  3. Thanks for the heads up.

    I measure the annual passage of time by how long until I can eat Johnathan apples again.
    Finishing off the last one for the year is, for me, akin to some people's sad when sportsball season ends.

    Being a connoisseur of them since grade school, I can pretty much tell you what the fruit Eve gave Adam in the Garden OF Eden tasted like.

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