When we planted another modest orchard just north of the two elderly apple trees, we bought a few galas that will one day replace the originals. For now, they’re still just babies. It will be a few more years before they sprout any fruit and more than likely, we’ll have moved on. Planting an orchard seemed like it would be a good selling point though we wouldn’t reap much–if any–benefits after the cost and work of transplanting. But what is a hobby farm without a fruit tree orchard?
Fruit isn’t the only benefit of the geriatric trees. The cats love scrambling up their trunks because they have hunched with age and are an easy climb. Sometimes the squirrels dash covertly over for a mouthful of apples and during the summer of cicadas, there were several insects at any given time droning from the apple’s limbs.
Any apples that fall to the ground and rot before we can sink our teeth in are fed to the creatures that probably appreciate them more than any of us: the horses. We dump fruit in their paddock by the bucketful and watch them eat. The way they rip off the flesh and smack their lips, it almost sounds like a pride of lions eating freshly caught prey:
The two apple trees give me the impression of brothers. I have no idea why other than the way they have grown up side-by-side, weathering the strong winds and storms through innumerable seasons. I don’t have the heart to hack them down as some guests suggest I probably should. For now, they are in retirement–still chugging along with not much being expected of them save one unpretentious yet appreciated apple crop each autumn.