I knocked my pomegranate tree over. Partly. My hose and I. It was very sudden: I woke up Sunday and went wow.
It’s juice-making time inside all those bright little reddening balls and clearly Saturday’s watering got slurped right up. There are no fruits on the back where it’s up against the shed, and so all the weight was towards the yard and there you go. See that oversized stake? It and all these branches you see leaning to the right were upright on Saturday. And they will be again once harvest is over.
The new neighbor’s little girl told me about the lemon trees in their back yard and asked to see the fruit trees in mine.
I told her she couldn’t just go back there, her mom had to know where she was. So she and her little brother and their mom all got invited over to see.
They’ve moved quite a few times and expect to again in a few years and the mom was wistful, telling me what kinds of fruit trees she’d like to plant someday–but what can you take with you, you know?
On a more practical note, she told me of a type of Chinese or Asian pumpkin (her description) that you cannot buy here. That she was trying to find seeds for so she could have them again. Like my apricot trees! she said. You want them you have to grow them if you can find even that, right? She was so happy for me that I got to have my Anya offspring.
I wished her all the best–and you know that the search for a source for her has begun. She’s only lived in the area a few weeks, and now I’ve got a list of the various specialty grocery stores she could try.
Not to mention, now I know which of my neighbors adores the pomegranates that we have so many of coming up. I can’t wait.
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My family in Fremont shop at Asian grocery stores all the time. Oakland’s Chinatown area has terrific stores and a farmer’s market with many Asian vegetable varieties. There are still things I cannot find, so who knows if she will have good luck.
We had a little pomegranate tree when I was a kid. Only sour little fruit. You were so smart to choose your variety carefully
That tree is carrying the weight of its harvest off-balance! I hope it rebounds once its load is lightened. So nice that you got to have good fruit-tree-bonding time with the new neighbors.
Comment by ccr in MA 08.31.22 @ 1:13 pmLeave a comment
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