When last we spoke, I was showing you my apple vignette on my kitchen table.
All is not ap-peeling in the apple world though.
My "job" every week is to pick up all the crabapples before my husband mows that part of the yard. I hate this "job".
I use quotes because I've yet to see any "money" from this "job".
Now, I don't want you to think I'm a crabapple hater. I mean, the blooms in the spring are drop dead GORGEOUS.
But the apples are gnarly. And small. And wormy.
There's no way I'm going to be eating these.
And there are a billion of them!
And even as I'm working my way around the tree, bent over at the waist, picking up the apples one by one, I can hear more apples hitting the ground.
Thump. Thump. Thumpidy thump thump.
Ugh.
It's a never ending job, I tell you!
Yesterday, it was all I could do to not walk over to the garage, fire up the chainsaw and take the sucker down.
I was so close.
What stopped me?
If I would have cut it down, I still would have had to pick up all the stupid apples. Plus the branches. And leaves.
And there's the whole not being able to pull the starter rope on the chainsaw thing.
OK, I guess I am a crabapple hater.
Do you have crabapples trees? Or have you mastered pulling the starter rope and gotten rid of the demons?
Tricia
I have a crabapple tree in my driveway. The apples are constantly falling in the summer and fall! I had been picking them up by hand, then taking them into a pile and picking them up with a snow shovel; I just recently found an apple broom on Amazon. It is a wire basket with a gaps and a long handle. Roll the basket over the apples and they are contained in the basket; then open up a gap a little wider and shake the apples out. ITs $59 but worth every penny for me!
Anonymous
Try putting a tarp under your tree and shaking the apples out of the tree. Its easy to bundle up the tarp and either pick through the apples or dispose of them.
Minnie's Milestones
LOL, I don't have one in my yard, but my sister did and your right they are a mess.
Marci
We dont have crap apple trees but we do have hedge apples. They are great to make a fall display with but the dang things are everywhere and if one lands on your head it will knock you out (they are big and heavy!)
The Old Parsonage
We had one for years, then the hurricaine last year toppled it over. Can't say I was sad to see it go. we used a rake to pull them into a pile then a shovel to scoop them up.
I do miss the blooms for cutting though.
Leann
Ida
Oh my this made me laugh big time. I mean the part about your "job" and not seeing any actual "money" for your hard work...how true is that. I think I have many such jobs. It has to be annoying not being able to do much with the apples although this year we picked up apples that fell off our neighbors apple tree that they just let rot and fall to the ground and we made apple pies with them. - I'd say though that those blooms would be worth keeping the tree around as they really were gorgeous.
TARYTERRE
In my younger days when I could pull the chainsaw I cut down what I didn't like. These days everything stays. I do not like crabapples either. Good luck.
rush
What to do, what to do... It's something like putting up with the thorns to enjoy the roses.
Anne's Attic - Design
Pam you are to funny, you say what I feel about menial tasks. One thing about them they are here to stay. Jo XX
Chris K in Wisconsin
I think I am crabbiest about our crab apple tree every Aug. and Sept. The apples begin to fall off the trees and the squirrels love to take one bite out of every single one. THEN the bees come to add even more fun. I love bees. We have many many flowers in the yard and a veg garden, so I welcome the bees..... However, every year myself and/or others in the family, when walking outside in sandal feet, step on one of those apples w/ an angry bee and get a nasty sting. The blossoms are beautiful in May, but they are such a mess in Aug. thru Oct.
Musings from Kim K.
I'm smiling at this post. I can totally related. We have a messy crab apple tree in our yard and it drives me absolutely NUTS! I've slipped a zillion times on top of those blasted apples.
Joanne Noragon
The deer eat our crab apples. Better than my roses.
P.
What do you do with the picked up crab apples? If you knew a pig farmer, they might like the "feed." I think there are versions of crabs that just bloom but don't bear fruit. Maybe if you cut enough branches in the spring (awesome photo, btw), you can whittle that sucker down and replant with a non-bearing crab? Okay, none of this is probably helpful, but I feel your pain. My parents used to have butternut trees. My dad paid the grandkids a penny apiece to pick them up, and they did!
Pam Kessler
I suppose pigs would love them though, wouldn't they. Never thought of that. They just end up rotting and decomposing in the compost pile.
Linda @ Itsy Bits And Pieces
Your so funny, Pam! Here it's full size apples...one of our trees drops them all. The squirrels love them, but so do the bees...making it a simply joyous time when we pick them up.
Vickie @ Ranger 911
Your post gives us all insight as to why they're called CRAB apples, Pam! hehe At least you didn't get bonked on the head with one! If you have a neighbor with horses, they'd probably be happy to take those pails of apples off your hands. In fact, maybe they could just send the horses over for a snack and save you the trouble of picking the apples up.......but then again, you'd be picking up an entirely different kind of "apples". Hmmmm.
Thanks for my morning laugh, Pam!
Pam Kessler
I never once thought about feeding horses with them. I guess they would like them. Good call about the other "apples". I would have traded one problem for another smellier one 🙂
ThrifterSisters
No crabapple trees here, so it's hard for me to be a hater. But Cherry Blossom trees? So, so pretty but also such a pain. When the wind blows those pretty pink blooms off the trees, they stick to everything. Once, they even dyed the bottom of our boat pink in spots. I thought it was great! My husband? Not so much.
~Erica