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  • EPISODE 522 HARD CIDER AT ASCHOOL DANCE leads to the HEREFORDSHIRE POMONA

    EPISODE 522   HARD CIDER AT A SCHOOL DANCE LEADS TO HEREFORDSHIRE POMONA


    alan skeoch
    january 28, 2022

    The Herefordshire Pomona, containing figures and descriptions of the most  esteemed kinds of Apples and Pears, Volume 2 only with 77 fine  chromolithographs colored from Nature by Miss Ellis and Miss Bull
    The Redstreak apple … one of the most famous apples in the world

    HEY, KID! DO YOU WANT A SLUG OF HARD CIDER?
      Date  October, 1953
      Place  Humberside Collegiate auditorium
      Purpose:  School Dance
      Startling Event:  Crock of hard cider passed around
      Person: Alan Skeoch, Grade 9

    “Here take a slug of this, kid…right from the gallon crock.”
    “What is it?”
    “Never you mind…take a slug or pass it on.  Consider 
    the stuff an initiation into high school.”
    “But what is it?”
    “Grow up kid, it’s just hard cider…Ontario hard cider….won’t kill you.”
    “Not too sure.”
    “Your a big man now, kid…no short pants anymore…take a slug.”

    That happened a long time ago.  Back in 1953 at Humberside Collegiate’s first fall dance.  My eyes were wide
    open…saucers taking  in a new world of big kids.  I think I took a slug but not too sure.  I know I whirled Elizabeth 
    Kilty a little too fast on the dance floor and her skirt went up like Marilyn Monroe’s.  That could have been the hard
    cider at work.

    Hard cider!  Quite common and not wonderfull…looked sort of muddy and tasted way too sweet to be enjoyed.
    Years later I discovered why this elicit booze was not so great.   Our cider, Ontario cider in unlabelled gallon crocks
    was made with windfall applies likely.  Apples from a bunch of trees.  Maybe even wormy!  Who could tell if worms
    were present once the apples were ground to pulp with a spiked roller and then pressed in a wooden press
    that had been sitting in a barn or back yard garage for a year.

    I never developed a taste for hard cider after that welcome by the big boys at Humberside.

    Never is the wrong word.  In 1965 , Marjorie, Eric and I lived on hard cider for one wonderful summer.
    Bulmer’s hard cider and the occasional mug of  “Scrumpy” from beneath a pub plank counter.  The
    scrumpy reminded me of the gallon crock stuff.  But the commercial Bulmer’s cider was wonderful
    and inexpensive.  Our tour of England, Ireland and Scotland in 1965 floated on English cider…Herefordshire
    English cider in heavy glass quart bottles with stoneware screw tops.  Available everywhere along with
    all kinds of cheeses and great turtle shaped loaves of fresh bread.  The cost was minimal and the place
    to dine could be a dry stone fence or a great pile of loose stacked hay in a farm field.

    That kind of cider is sold in LCBO stores even today.  About $3 a can.  No stone topped bottles anymore.


    WHY IS HEREFORDSHIRE CIDER SO ADMIRED BY THOSE WHO THIRST”

    “The Redstreak cider apple is one of the oldest cider apples in circulation.   A few books establish the Redstreak  cider apple trees to Herefordshire in 1600’s. One book notes the Redstreak cider apples were considered ‘fit for Princess’ establishing Herefordshire’s reputation as the cider country of England. Produces a good quality bittersweet juice, an excellent addition for blending. The fruit is medium to small yellow apple with red strip

    (ADVERTISEMENT by one Hereford nursery now offering Cider Apple trees at $44.90 each)

    What is so special about English cider…especially Herefordshire English cider?  It’s the apples.
    Special cider applies…the greatest of which was the REDSTREAK.  Not a spectacular apple.  Very
    nondescript…small, perhaps a bit of apple scab…yellow background with red streaks…bitter sweet 
    taste.  Definitely not an eating apple or an applesauce apple.  But a perfect cider apple.  Proved so
    by centuries of care.  Imported into Hereford and named the “Scudamore Crab“, having first been intensively planted by the diplomat and politician John Scudamore, 1st Viscount Scudamore from France  and grown
    on his country estate.  Noted as being present as far back as 1600.

    DO NOT BUY APPLE REDSTREAK APPLE SEEDS…APPLES DO NOT BREED TRUE.

    Apples do not breed true.  Orchards with mixed varieties will never produce Redstreak apples.  
    They must be grafted from cuttings.  Edward Freeman, my grandfatheer, was good at grafting.  Our farm once had
    wild apple trees on which he grafted prize apples but granddad never produced fine cider.
    His alcohol thirst was satisfied with rhubarb wine and the occasional bottle of whisky that mom
    smuggled into the fifth line kitchen unseen by the ‘lips that touch liquor will never touch mine’ crowd.
    Granddad did love apples and he knew how to get apples with his grafting knife and wax.
    I remember some branches on Edward Freeman’s wild apple trees we’re loaded with fruit while
    the rest of the tree had tiny apples or none at all.  I was too young to know that Edward Freeman had 
    been busy grafting.

    Hereford Redstreak
    Herefordshire Redstreak apple today…small, bitter, bit of scab…and lots of thick skin..perfect for cider.

    This is only the beginning of my apple episode.  A teaser.  The bigger story is coming.  Previous episodes have
    outlined the nature of the Country Estates…up to 5,000 o them…that were being built and renovated by
    affluent English families during the 18th and 19th centuries.   Along with the renovations came the desire
    to develop unique gardens with plants gathered by plant collectors roaming the seven seas.    Some plants 
    did not need to be distant.  There were so many apple varieties in England that many had no names. Thousands
    of apple varieties most of them unidentified.
    Not for long.   Head Gardeners and owners of these country estates began paying attention to the wealth of apple varieties, particularly those
    in Herefordshire.   Walled gardens had sections for fruit orchards…exotic fruit like peaches and nectarines but
    also apples and pears.  My grandfather, Edward Freeman, was one of these head gardeners for a short few years between 1898 and 1906
    at Eywood Court in Herefordshire.  Some of His plantings still existed in the 1960’s, perhaps still do.

    From 1878 to 1884 or thereabouts two women were at work with paint brushes making Hereford Apples 
    famous among art lovers and gardeners.
    The most spectacular art of the apple emerged at the same time as the gardeners nursed their orchards from decline
    to explosive growth.
    What emerged was one of the wonders of the world of the
    apple.  Two volumes of wonderful art were produced by two ladies between 1878
    and 1884 titled THE HEREFORDSHIRE POMONA.  Only 600 copies were printed. Volumes
    that are so highly valued today that when copies were moved from one place to another
    they were accompanied by armed guards. (*that will be subject of Episode 523 coming next)

    Book breakers have broken the spines of many of these books and then professional 
    framers have enclosed the apple artwork into high cost lithographic art.
    Shortly after 1965 Marjorie and I were able to buy two of these pages.  They now
    hang in our house.  Visitors hardly notice them.  Who would want a picture of
    a bunch of apples in their living room?  One of these (right in picture below) is
    the famed Redstreak now lost to the world.




    Our living room is small but features two very famous lithographs on the north wall…see them?




    One is more famous than the other…our dog Woody is aligned perfectly…his body
    points to the picture.  See it?

    Close up…just a picture of some apples, right?  Wrong…picture of the Redstreak
    apple variety.  Now believed to be extinct.


    THE famed redstreak cider apple…the cornerstone of great hard cider.  Nondescript
    in appearance.  Small.  yellowish skin covered with red streaks. Not tasty.  But when converted from apple juice to hard apple
    cider a wonder happens.

    ‘Redstreak’
    Redstreak apple.jpg
    Species Malus domestica
    Breeder John Scudamore, 1st Viscount Scudamore
    Origin upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/b/be/Flag_of_England.svg/46px-Flag_of_England.svg.png 2x” data-file-width=”800″ data-file-height=”480″ style=”border: 1px solid rgb(234, 236, 240); vertical-align: middle;”> England, 1600s.
    “The Redstreak, also spelt Redstrake, Red Streak or Red-streak, is or was a very old variety of cider apple formerly commonly planted in England.
    It is sometimes referred to as the Herefordshire Redstreak or Old Redstreak to distinguish it from later-developed varieties, such as the Somerset Redstreak, with a similar name.

    Excerpt from Wikipedia below


    The variety is traditionally said to have first appeared in the early 17th century; John Evelyn recorded that it was originally named the “Scudamore Crab“, having first been intensively planted by the diplomat and politician John Scudamore, 1st Viscount Scudamore.[1] Scudamore’s efforts in improving and raising fruit trees on his estate at Holme Lacy were an attempt to match the superior French cider available at the time.[2] Scudamore had been ambassador to France, and supposedly raised this apple from a pip brought back from there.
    During the 17th century, the Redstreak (as the apple was later to become known) became celebrated as the finest cider apple variety in England, and was the source of Herefordshire‘s reputation as the premier cider-producing region in the country.[3] Scudamore himself assisted in popularising the drink, having tall, elegant glasses for it engraved with his and the royal arms, and setting up large-scale production at Holme Lacy, where the cider was bottled and kept in water-cooled cellars.[4]
    For a time cider made from Redstreak apples changed hands at extraordinarily high prices – as high as the best imported wine – but by the late 18th century the variety was already in decline.[3] By the 19th century the Redstreak was reported to be almost extinct, much like the Styre, another formerly well-known cider apple variety that had suffered from an apparent decline in quality and productiveness. Thomas Knight‘s Pomona Herefordiensis (1811), noted that “trees of the Red-streak can now no longer be propagated; and the fruit, like the trees, is affected by the debilitated old age of the variety, and has in a very considerable degree, survived those qualities to which it was owing its former fame”.
    This decline may have occurred in older apple cultivars as viruses gradually built up in their tissues over time and were transferred during propagation, with increasing negative effects on productiveness, vigour and even flavour.[5]
    Herefordshire Redstreak” apples are currently available from some nurseries, but it is unclear whether these are related to the original variety, which may now be extinct.”

    CONCLUSION…BUT NOT THE END OF THE STORY

    Over my lifetime I have found and tasted many wild apples whose parent tree was
    planted by birds and animals.  Each wild tree is approached with hope and wonder but
    none have approached the Redstreak.   But how would I know?   Honestly I will
    never know because few have ever been crushed and squeezed .  I may have
    missed the great Canadian cider apple.

    Next Episode “  THE STORY OF THE HEREFORDSHIRE POMONA
                     (Includes the Redstreak Cider Apple…when I tell this story I get
                      emotional…such a wonderful story.)



    post script:  Some cider apples trees available today in Herefordshire nursary


    • Bramley's Seedling apple tree
      Bramley is the essential English cooking and sharp cider apple, famous for its rich tangy acidity.
      • Awards: RHS AGM (current)
      • Picking season: Late
      • Pollination group: 3
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Brown Snout

      Brown Snout cider apple tree
      A traditional English bittersweet cider apple.
      • Pollination group: 6
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Brown’s Apple

      Brown's Apple cider apple tree
      Brown’s Apple is a traditional English cider apple variety producing a sharp juice.
      • Pollination group: 5
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Bulmers Norman

      Bulmers Norman cider apple tree
      A traditional English bittersweet cider apple.
      • Pollination group: 3
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Chisel Jersey

      Chisel Jersey cider apple tree
      Chisel Jersey is a traditional English hard cider apple variety, producing a bittersweet juice.
      • Pollination group: 6
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Dabinett

      Dabinett cider apple tree
      Dabinett is a traditional English cider apple variety, producing a bittersweet juice.
      • Pollination group: 6
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Ellis Bitter

      Ellis Bitter cider apple tree
      Ellis Bitter is a traditional and popular English cider apple, producing a bittersweet juice.
      • Pollination group: 5
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Geneva Tremlett’s Bitter

      Geneva Tremlett's Bitter cider apple tree
      A bittersharp cider apple variety, found at the USDA repository at Geneva, but probably of English origin.
      • Pollination group: 4
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Harry Masters Jersey

      Harry Masters Jersey cider apple tree
      Harry Masters Jersey is a traditional English cider apple variety, producing a bittersweet juice.
      • Pollination group: 4
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Kingston Black

      Kingston Black cider apple tree
      Kingston Black is one of the premier English cider varieties and produces a bittersharp juice.
      • Pollination group: 4
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Major

      Major cider apple tree
      A traditional English bittersweet hard-cider variety.
      • Pollination group: 3
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Porter’s Perfection

      Porter's Perfection cider apple tree
      Porter’s Perfection is a 19th century English cider variety producing a bittersharp juice.
      • Pollination group: 3
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Somerset Redstreak

      Somerset Redstreak cider apple tree
      An English cider apple variety producing a very high-quality bittersweet juice.
      • Pollination group: 5
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Stembridge Cluster

      Stembridge Cluster cider apple tree
      A traditional English bittersweet cider apple from the town of Stembridge in Somerset.
      • Pollination group: 2
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Stoke Red

      Stoke Red cider apple tree
      A traditional English cider apple producing a bittersharp juice.
      • Pollination group: 6
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
    • Cider apple tree

      Sweet Coppin

      Sweet Coppin cider apple tree
      A traditional English cider variety, producing a sweet juice.
      • Pollination group: 3
      • Uses: Hard cider
      • Self-fertility: Not self-fertile

    Excerpt from the Hereford Pomona below…work done by two ladies who should never be forgotten.
    see next Episode for full  story.  There is quite  a difference between an apple photograph (page above) and the
    apples painted in the Herefordshire Pomona, (page below)

    The Herefordshire Pomona – Biodiversity Heritage Library

  • Fwd: Ben Franklin’s Quotes

    Seems that Ben Franklin has some good one liners like Napoleon.  This list was sent

    to me by Dan Bowyer, friend and fellow teacher of history. *He that falls in love with himself will have no rivals.”
    The Narcissus syndrome.

    alan skeoch
    Jan.28, 2022



    Be at war with your vices, at peace with your neighbors, and let every New Year find you a better man.

    Diligence is the mother of good luck.

    Love your enemies, for they tell you your faults.

    He that would live in peace and at ease, must not speak all he knows or judge all he sees.

    Great beauty, great strength, and great riches are really and truly of no great use; a right heart exceeds all.

    He that falls in love with himself will have no rivals.

    The sting of a reproach, is the truth of it.

    Reading makes a full man, meditation a profound man, discourse a clear man.

    Beware of little expenses: A small leak will sink a great ship.

    Hide not your talents, they for use were made: What’s a sun-dial in the shade?

    Do you love life? Then do not squander time, for that is the stuff life is made of.

    Well done is better than well said.

    Glass, china, and reputation, are easily crack’d, and never well mended.

    He that lies down with Dogs, shall rise up with fleas.

    Genius without education is like silver in the mine.

    If man could have half his wishes, he would double his troubles.

    The poor have little, beggars none, the rich too much, enough not one.

    Don’t throw stones at your neighbors, if your own windows are glass.

    A true friend is the best possession.

    Wish not so much to live long as to live well.


    Also attached…picture of Frank Freeman’s folk art version of a biplane that Sam Markou has
    researched and identified.  Not a Camel as John Wardle said.

  • EPISODE 521 NAPOLEON SAID ‘MEN ARE RULED BY TOYS’ (assume the same applies to women)

    Napoléon Bonaparte

    “You tell me that class distinctions are baubles used by monarchs, I defy you to show me a republic, ancient or modern, in which distinctions have not existed. You call these medals and ribbons baubles; well, it is with such baubles that men are led. I would not say this in public, but in a assembly of wise statesmen it should be said. I don’t think that the French love liberty and equality: the French are not changed by ten years of revolution: they are what the Gauls were, fierce and fickle. They have one feeling: honour. We must nourish that feeling. The people clamour for distinction. See how the crowd is awed by the medals and orders worn by foreign diplomats. We must recreate these distinctions. There has been too much tearing down; we must rebuild. A government exists, yes and power, but the nation itself – what is it? Scattered grains of sand.”


    ― Napoléon Bonaparte


    History of the Legion of Honor

    The Legion of Honor was founded on May 19, 1802, by First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte, in a hostile context. After lengthy discussions at the Council of State, it was adopted by 56 votes for and 38 against by the Tribunat, and 166 votes for and 110 against by the Corps législatif (legislative body).

    The new institution was part of the extensive program to reorganize the State, along with the Civil Code, the Conseil d’Etat (Council of State), the Court of Auditors, the prefects and the grandes écoles (specialized national elite schools).

    Napoleon Bonaparte was aware of the need to restore a comprehensive system of rewards, inspired by ancient honorific orders swept away by the Revolution, but respectful of equality among citizens.

    Napoleon Bonaparte pursued three visionary objectives:

    • Reconciling the French, exhausted by a decade of political instability and military conflicts
    • Reuniting them around a common ideal: individual honor and national honor
    • Uniting the courage of military personnel with the talents of civilians, as the strong symbol of a powerful and unified State.

    What the creation of the Legion of Honor heralded was important: no privileges, no exemptions, no remuneration, but the recognition only of individual merit, acquired and not transmitted.

    First presentation of the Legion of Honor insignia by Napoleon in the church of Les Invalides, July 15, 1804 © MLH

  • Fwd: EPISODE 519 MARJORIE …AND SOME GUY NAMED ROBERT




    EPISODE 519   MARJORIE AND SOME GUY NAMED ROBERT


    alan skeoch
    jan. 25, 2022


    “Just what the hell is going on?”
    “Playing bridge via my computer, Alan”
    “Who are you playing with…every day for past week.”
    “Playing with Rob…must concentrate…you could get me a coffee if your so inclined.”
    “Get you coffee while you are playing with Robert…whoever the hell that is.”
    “Stop being silly…Rob is faster than I am.”
    “Let me talk to the sob.”
    “Alan … get the coffee and stop harping at me.”
    “Just who in hell is Robert?”
    “The name is not Robert…it’s Robot…”
    “ROBOT!”
    “Even worse…some kind of pet name.”
    “Robot, Alan…a machine player…not human…but faster than a human.”
    “Let me take a look!”
    “See?”
    “You mean that you and Dolores are playing bridge with a robot.?”
    “Exactly….you could join us if you were not so insane…Did you really
    think I was having a game with some guy named Robert?”
    “No…just kidding…(damn it all anyway…fooled me_)















    Sent from my iPhone



  • Fwd: EPISODE 520 FOLK ART by FRANK FREEMAN (MOM’S BROTHER) ALSO EPISODE 271



    EPISODE 271     FOLK ART by my Uncle Frank Freeman
    REPEAT AS EPISODE 520


    alan skeoch
    Mach  2021
    January 25, 2022



    Last night, I thought of my uncle Frank Freeman specifically two of his folk art pieces

    that he made in winter evenings in 1942 when his son Ted was about 6 years old.
    Pieces made from whatever he could find in his little blacksmith shop on the farm.
    So tonight, January 27, 2022, I thought I would like to make an Episode out of
    those pieces of folk art.  To my surprise I found Episode 271…the story had been
    done a year ago.   Do you remember?

    Folk art is a theme I would like to expand upon.  Why?  Because we can all do folk art
    if we want to…just thinking about a shape is a lot of fun.  Perfection is not a goal.
    Imagination is the goal.

    REPEAT EPISODE 271
    There is a deep desire in many probably most human beings to create something 
    with their own hands and minds.   Some human beings follow the fine art tradition
    that involves  training…creating artistic objects in a sophisticated manner.

    Folk artists on the other hand do  not worry about fine art, sophisticated art.
    Folk artists do not worry about fine lines.   Often folk artists use items of  everyday
    life and do not particularly care about accuracy  of line and shape.  Nor do they
    worry about critical comments.  Utilitarian art in this instance…to be handled.

    My Uncle Frank Freeman created two early example of folk art that intrigued
    me.   He seems to have made both piece in March  1942.   And  they are objects  made
    as  toys for his six or seven year old  son Ted.   The objects  are not made
    to be submitted  for comment by a jury of accomplished lovers of fine art.
    They are made to be used.  They are made from scrap materials found here and there on 
    the farm.   They are imaginative.  Unique.  Tangible.  Unsophisticated.  Joyful.




    Uncle Frank loved to talk to people.   He was tall but not silent.  Warm hearted.  Certainly not wealthy in the monetary sense
    but rich in other things particularly the natural world  around him.  He always had time for other people.  He loved  his very difficult farm
    composed  of glacial till …rocks, boulders, sand and soil…piled up forming fields that slanted in such a way that little pockets retained pools of water
    that some call  swamps.  And all these pools drained into a big swamp in the centre of the farm.  The farm owned by Lucinda
    and Frank Freeman would be 100 acres of headaches to most farmers.  To Frank, his farm was a wonder of creation.

    How do I describe him best?   I can do that with a short comment he made to me decades ago.

    “Alan, I love farming with horses rather than tractors.  Do you want to know why?”
    “Why?”
    “A tractor never stops working.  Now horses, on the other hand, must take a rest part way
    through a job.  And when the team rest I get to rest and consider the world around me.”

    Another anecdote:     One year Uncle Frank thought he was about to die from cancer.  He was not…but
    he did  not  know that.  “Alan, I took my last walk around the farm today.  Every trail, field, swamp and forest.
    Just to say good bye.”  (These are my words but they accurately cover what he said to me.)  He lived for many
    more years.  I expect he took that walk again.

    Made with these hands…for a reason.  Made from things cast aside.   Made to be touched and handled.   Made to be useful, to entertain, to be;


    Am I running out of steam?  Nope.  Got lots of stories to come.  The next one is taking a lot of time….trying to find the unfindable.


    alan skeoch
    FEb. 2021

    (Fifth Line, Erin Township, Wellington County)