When I discussed the blueberry bush that perished due to
our fugitive hen yesterday, I realized that I hadn’t talked about our blueberry
crop this year. As our blueberry bushes
get older, I would have thought that each year the production would
increase. That has indeed been the case
over the past several years, but not this year.
This year we didn’t pick as many blueberries as last
year. However, the quality of the
berries this year was excellent. They
were bigger, plumper (is that a word?), and sweeter! Why is that?
I really don’t know. There are
two theories I have that I attribute to this change. First, we got rains in the spring at
opportune times. I feel like the
providential rains allowed the bushes to suck up all the moisture and direct it
toward the berries. Maybe that was the
case, maybe not.
Here are three pictures that I took back in late April
after one of those soaking rains that I spoke of. I like the way that the drops of rain
decorate the leaves and berries like sparkling jewels.
A month later the blueberries turn from green and hard to
red and then big and blue.
Picking blueberries each day is one of Benjamin’s
jobs. He’s not excited about it, but
does it anyway. It is a tedious job,
looking through all of the bushes and picking only the ripe ones. I keep telling him there are much worse jobs! They don’t ripen all at the same time. He walks out with a quart-sized container and
will fill one of those up each day.
I mentioned that in past years the blueberries have been
smaller. Since the quality is so much
better this year we’ve snacked on them a lot more. We still washed some, laid them on baking
sheets, froze them, and then used a spatula to lift them and pour them into
gallon Zip Loc freezer bags to be used in cobblers, muffins, pancakes and
smoothies all year long. Tricia will
also cook some of them down in a pot with some honey to make a blueberry
syrup. Then we’ll make homemade
blueberry ice cream with it!
The 2016 Blueberry harvest is done, but we’ll continue to
eat them for months. If I can keep the
fugitive hen away from the bushes, we’ll have future harvests as well.
Do you have problems with birds/squirrels eating everything? i finally got a few grapes on my grape vine this year and as soon as they are almost ripe (just like with every single peach and fig on my trees) the squirrels swoop in and steal every one. overnight, in one raid. for some reason they left most of my tomatoes alone this year whereas last year they took a bite out of pretty much every one and left it for me, on the plant, the ground - or on the fence line just to taunt me ;) jerks.
ReplyDeleteSo far squirrels haven't given us problems. Birds have eaten their fair share of berries though. I've tried various things with limited success... Mylar streamers, rubber snakes hanging in the bushes, aluminum pie pans on strings, etc. Probably the most effective thing is that my neighbors have a bunch of fig trees and grape vines and they aren't shy about pulling out the 12 gauge shotgun and making feathers fly. There are always dead birds laying in the yard. That seems to be the most effective deterrent:) Oh, one other thing that works is putting up nets over the blueberry bushes...
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