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Pick Your Landscape
By Kate Shelton.
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How do you preserve a countryside of
farms and forests and get a basket of berries at the same time?
Go directly to your local U-pick farm and start picking! By supporting
local U-pick farms, you are making a conscious choice to conserve
and celebrate your scenic landscape. The benefits of experiencing
a U-pick farm are numerous. Keeping strong the tradition of local
community food systems, U-pick farms provide an opportunity for
both connection and preference. At a U-pick farm, your relationship
and commitment strengthens when you make the decision as to which
apple goes into your basket or what berries reach your mouth.
You establish an immediate link between the farmer who grows your
apples, strawberries, blackberries, and raspberries and the setting
where your food was raised. One simple trip makes a conscious
choice to sustain the importance of fresh, good tasting food.
What an uncomplicated way to simultaneously contribute to your
health, local growers, and the natural environment! There is no
store that could ever offer the view of a multi-acre fruit orchard
while shopping. So the next time you want to make a smoothie or
berry cobbler, plan ahead for a visit to your local U-pick farm
and commit that much more to the future of the land that provides
your food.
Our region has many U-pick farms with fruit ripe for the picking!
If you are in Madison County (or just want to take a ride out
to some of the most beautiful country around) you owe it to yourself
to visit Zimmerman Berry Farm. Pam Zimmerman runs the U-pick show
with the help of her husband Billy and children Rachel and Will.
Beginning in Mid-June, black raspberries ripen, followed by blackberries,
wine berries, blueberries, and red raspberries by the first of
August. They also have currents, yellow raspberries, and elderberries.
Zimmerman Berry Farm has wide, well-maintained rows, making picking
easy. They can be reached at 828-656-2056.
Next, we travel to Weaverville in Buncombe County. Dogwood Hills
Farm has everything from strawberries to cut flowers with blueberries,
cherries, blackberries, raspberries, grapes, and apples in between.
Call them for availability at 828-645-6286.
On the other end of Buncombe County, in the Fairview area, is
Bel Aire Farm. Kitty and Bill Lynch have grapes for your selection.
Call them at 828-628-1835. Also, in Fairview is Flying Cloud Farm.
Annie and Isaiah Perkinson offer strawberries and blueberries
for your picking pleasure. Contact them at 828-628-3348.
Moving into Henderson County, we find apple heaven. Many of the
apple orchards offer U-pick apples, with dozens of varieties to
choose from. It’s just not autumn in the Appalachian Mountains
without experiencing the excitement of finding and picking that
perfectly ripe apple right off the tree. Apples start ripening
in September and continue through the season until pumpkins appear
on the vine. Where to find your jack-o-lantern? Look no farther
than many of the orchards that also offer this Halloween specialty.
Henderson County also has Blueberry Hill Farm in Zirconia offering
bio-dynamically and organically raised blueberries starting in
mid-July. The Nelson family welcomes you to come out and enjoy
their selection. They can be reached at 828-696-8357. Next spring
make sure to visit Obermiller’s Strawberry Farm in Hendersonville.
If you are still looking for more adventures, and find yourself
in the Columbus area (in Polk County) blueberries and muscadine
grapes are ready for harvesting at DeerHaven Hills Farm. Contact
Michael and Gail Blate at 828-863-4660. Also in Polk County is
Green River Farm Millspring in Mill Spring. Dan and Jean Servideo
are offering U-pick blueberries and are awaiting your call at
828-894-3431.
Continuing your travels into the southern mountains, there are
numerous opportunities to prolong your enjoyment of fresh fruit
and picturesque landscapes (landscapes you are helping to preserve
by supporting local farms). While in Cullowhee, in Jackson County,
stop by Thomas Berry Farm. Pelham Thomas always welcomes pickers
to his patch of U-pick blueberries. Call the farm at 828-293-5132.
Now, if berries aren’t quite what you are after, stop by
Topton in Cherokee County for a twist on U-pick. Otter Creek Trout
Farm offers “U-pick” trout! Nicole and Alex Denison
have a half-mile creek stocked for anglers. Schedule a visit by
calling 828-321-9810. While you are in Cherokee County, Carringer
Blueberries, in Murphy, has a great supply of fresh blueberries
to accompany your trout. Call Lyle and Grace Carringer at 828-837-7805
for information.
You can wrap up your U-pick tour of the landscapes and farms of
western North Carolina at Qualla Berry Farm in Haysville in Clay
County. John Clarke grows delicious red raspberries, an old-time
local variety. They are open on Saturdays from June until September
and can be contacted at 828-389-3551.
Whether it is berries, apples, pumpkins, or fish, your needs can
be met simply by visiting one of your local growers. Take shopping
to the next level and allow yourself to fully enjoy where your
food comes from. Become an active shopper. Don’t settle
for a grocery cart. Take your family to the fields and orchards
where you can get the freshest food next to being right in your
back yard.
There are other farms throughout the region that offer strawberries
in the spring, cut flowers during the summer, and the many apple
orchards that welcome pickers in the fall that can be found in
the Local Food Guide--online at www.AppalachianGrown.org.
The 2005 Guide is now out and available for free all over the
region.
Kate Shelton, a native to this region, has enjoyed working with
ASAP during the publication of the 2005 Local Food Guide. As a
special education teacher, she appreciates ASAP’ s Growing
Mind program as it brings gardens to schools.
Back
to New Life Journal..
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