| By Carolyn Rundle Field, November 24, 2009 |
|
When the Tobiassens, who are only the second owners, moved in, the original owner gave them a handwritten schematic chart of the orchard that identifies the seven varieties of apples—Jonathans, McIntosh, Staymans, Cortlands, Macouns, Delicious, and Granny Smiths—planted there. Asked if he can identify the different varieties by sight, Tobiassen laughs and says, “I sometimes still have to consult the chart.” He keeps the original schematic, now dog-eared and yellowed, along with extra copies, in a file in his office.
Maintaining the orchard requires quite a bit of work. The trees need to be pruned every January or February to prevent them from becoming overgrown. Tobiassen does the work himself, with help from two landscapers he hires. It generally takes the three men three days to do all the trees. “The deer help too,” he notes. “They keep the bottom of the trees trimmed.” The original owner used to give the tree clippings to Adrian Offinger, who owns property on Chestnut Hill Road and maintains a farm stand during the summer. Offinger uses the clippings—some of which are up to three feet long—to make stakes for his tomato plants. Several months after moving in, Tobiassen received a phone call from Offinger asking if he could come by and gather up the clippings; Tobiassen was happy to continue the arrangement.
In addition to trimming the trees, Tobiassen treats them for bugs and insects. In early spring, he brings out his tractor and sprayer, and circling each tree, applies a pre-emergent oil that helps get rid of any insects that might be hiding in the tree bark. Once the leaves begin to bud, he sprays the trees every two to three weeks to protect them from pests. “I don’t use organic sprays, but the ones I buy are probably less toxic than the sprays commercial orchard growers use,” he notes.
So what do the Tobiassens do with all the apples from 80 trees? “My wife makes apple pies, apple crisp, and apple sauce, and we give a lot of apples away. Some of our friends come over every fall to pick their own apples. I’ll give them the schematic so they know which variety they’re picking.”
What are Tobiassen’s favorite apples? “I like Jonathans and Staymans for eating off the tree, and Granny Smiths for pies, of course,” he says.
