Tag Archives: chokeberries

Blooms, Blooms, Beautiful Blooms

Oh I wish you could smell these!

Or walk through the aisles and just listen to the birds chirp and the bees hum as they flit from place to place enjoying all the blossoms.

Watching that big, mean Rottweiler stop and smell the flowers is a real treat too.  Although, I couldn’t get a really good picture of him this year!  It’s just too funny watching him stop and sniff.  

Right now when they are so pretty you can overlook all the grass that is trying to grow under the plants and just enjoy the beautiful miracle that is happening turning those tiny little plants we planted 10 years ago into the beautiful floral beauties and then  a super nutritional berry right before our eyes.   Isn’t the power of nature magical!

Meet the Fogle’s in the Field

IMG_9765_smallIMG_9846_smallA few weeks ago when the Aronia berries were in full bloom, we decided to have a family photo taken.  Our family has grown, as have the berries, since we first began blogging about our Aronia plantation.

Those three little beauties in the top picture love to help Grandpa and Grandma.  Anytime they hear that mower turn on, the oldest ones know it’s time for a ride.  Sometimes we even hitch up a utility trailer and go for “wagon rides”.  The beautiful blonde was pictured helping plant berries when she was a toddler.  Now she’s nearing 7 and can explain all about Aronia berries.  The middle one would just as soon have a handful of purple and a stained face about harvest time.  She loves eating right off the bush, as does Abe, our Rottweiler.  Aggie, his little sidekick, hasn’t had the chance to enjoy Aronia except in dog treats.   Abe and Aggie are our “critter control”.  The whole family has helped plant berries and we rely on our son’s horticulture degree and farming experience for advice and muscle from time to time.

We recall the days spent planting those little 4″ twigs and wishing and wondering how they’d grow.  Now look at the beautiful bushes over 6′ tall in some areas.  As you walk between the rows, it’s like being in another place.  They are truly a beautiful addition to our property.  We wish you could have seen the beautiful flowers and smelled the aroma of Aronia in bloom along with us that evening.   Now we tend, wait, and watch for late August and a bumper crop of berries.

 

 

Whew! 1,588 More Plants In the Ground

Saturday, October 9th we planted 1,488 more aronia melanocarpa berry plants. Bringing our total plantings to 2,388. It sure was a better day to plant than last year! Temperatures were over 75 degrees compared to last year when we planted in coveralls. We had wonderful help and could not have done it without all of them.

This year we drilled holes instead of trenching them in. Partly because the north field was planted in an area which last fall was primarly scrub trees and golf course. So many of the roots were not broken down enough to trench through. In early spring we used a Cat Mulcher to tear through the small timber and clear the field in preparation for this fall’s planting. What used to be two golf fareways and golf holes is no more either. The golf holes were a lot of work and not used enough to justify their labors so in went the berries. He’s just going to the golf course more now instead of mowing his own!

The summer of 2010 may be remembered as one of the wettest, yet the fall has been warm and dry. So since planting, we have been watering and watering! When the berry plants come they are much like an annual plant you would plant in your flower garden. They must be watered and cared for or they will not settle into their new ground. Especially in our heavy clay soils. So we’ve been spending a lot of time on the tractor pulling the trailer with the watering pump and hose connected. It’s a good system until the fuse blows, the battery dies, or someone falls out of the wagon when watering by hand and breaks a couple ribs.

We are looking forward to a wonderful healthy crop of aronia berries in the future. We continue to read and study about the health benefits of these high anti-oxidant fruits and look forward to their benefits on our farm for our family.

Getting the Fields Prepared for Fall Planting

Existing south field with plans for a two more rows this fall. Flags mark 2009 plantings.

Today we laid out the new rows in preparation for our fall plantings.  We’re preparing to plant 1,500 new aronia plants!  Rows will be about 385′ long at the longest point!  It will certainly change the landscape out the window eventually.  It’s amazing when you stop and think about all the work preparing and planting those tiny little plants and what they will look like at maturity.  Oh the miracles of nature!

Oh Deer

Aronia Berry Plant

The berries are up, well most of them anyway.  We did lose some over the winter, and all the wishing and watching still a few didn’t pull through.  But the percentage is fairly low.  It is really amazing when you consider the clay soil and the snow pack this winter that those little plants, much like any bedding plants you’d get in any flat would survive the winter.

Hardy Little Babies

Aronia Berry Plant

You wouldn’t believe the transformation taking place on the acreage. After the record-breaking winter’s snowfall, we wondered how the berries would survive. They have! Those small, small little plants are popping out of the ground and getting leaves. They really are hardy! Thank goodness. Our faith is restored each time we walk the rows. Even in areas where the snow was so heavy and the plants sunk in the trench, those little buggers are popping up. They are so forgiving–we know we’re in the right business!