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Try our apple farm
by blondegrlz

I help run a very small, very un-profitable family apple farm in Eastern Connecticut, and I can assure you, there is nothing consumeristic or excess about it. It is only slightly cheaper to go out and pick your own, but 80% of our customers would rather have the experience. The orchard is a beautiful place, from bloom in the spring to the apples in the fall to the bare trees in the winter. This week, we have kindergarden classes coming for field trips, where we will show them the difference between a Cortland and a McIntosh, teach them how the cider press works, and cut open an apple to show the "star" inside. If you think showing kids a picture of a tree, a video of a cider press and apples from the grocery store is just a good, then you have never been a child. We don't have a fancy checkout, hundreds of "value added" products, or tractor rides. But if you want to know why people enjoy picking their own apples, try a real farm - Allyn's Red Barn Orchard and Store.

Re: Try our apple farm
by apropos1

blondegrlz, I'm from Eastern CT and have been to the local orchards. I look forward to it every year, even as an adult. You are absolutely right when you say that showing kids a picture of an apple tree is just not the same. The smell alone is wonderful...I can't wait to take my nephews on their first apple-picking trip! When kids pick and then help cook something with those apples, it really hits home with them.

Thanks to you and all the other hard-working people out here that make it possible.

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