Meanwhile, on a Maine island
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historians discover one of the oldest living apple trees in North America
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The apples look like ones from a tree we had when I was a child. They weren't great for eating raw, but made decent pies and sauce.
Maine. Such an interesting coastline! As a crow flies, from the southern end, near the NH border, up to Eastport is something like 230 miles. But if you followed every bay, cove, and inlet along the coast the path would be over 3500 miles long!
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I've read of other people seeking out heirloom varieties of apples. One gentleman in West Virginia has located nearly one hundred by exploring old, abandoned farmstead in the state.
I was glad to read that they have successfully grafted specimens of that apple. Given the gnarly appearance of that tree, it would be uncertain if it would survive for much more time. The article did seem to suggest that the variety is not extinct in France.
We had an apple tree on the family farm that sprouted as a volunteer from a place we piled vegetable scrapes. It was a yellow apple and made some of the best-tasting applesauce. My father tried to propagate it by grafting, but with now success. Eventually, that tree died so its apples are lost, except in memory.
Big Al