For Apple Day: Eat your way to the river
It's Apple Day, one of my favourite days of the year and what better way to celebrate than to tell you about my recent trip to Longney, where Gloucestershire Orchard Trust have 18 acres of apple orchard under their tender care. Here you'll find older orchards with some trees well over a century old, plus their newer plantings of around 94 Gloucestershire cultivars which have just acquired national plant collection status at Plant Heritage . The jury's out on the actual number as DNA testing has revealed at least one locally named variety is actually a more well known one: Ribston Pippin in this case. Don't worry, there are dozens there which definitely have their origins rooted firmly in Gloucestershire and their cultivation at Longney is vital to their continued presence and preservation. There were around 200 local varieties at one time and today it's around 100 still in existence. Steve Mason - the Trust's Curator - was our knowledgeable guide who invited ...


hey VP I am going private so I will add you to my reading peeps if that is ok
ReplyDeleteWell - one thing about this summer - everything is looking very green and lush. Nice plot views VP
ReplyDeleteKaren
Lovely. So verdant.
ReplyDeletevery pretty
ReplyDeleteHey, the tires are blooming nicely! ;-)
ReplyDelete~ Monica
It all looks lush and wet, the way we Americans think an English garden should look. (Whether it actually should look this way is another story.)
ReplyDeleteIntrigued by the tyres VP - have you plans to use them on the plot ?
ReplyDeleteSOL - thanks, will catch up with you soon
ReplyDeleteAG, HM, Deb, Monica, MMD - thanks :)
Anna - they hold the plastic tarpaulin down. It gets very windy on our site! I also use them for mini coldframes and as a stand for my water butt.