September 22, 2004
Philadelphia
Daily News
Written by Sono Motoyama
IKE KERSCHNER admits he is a member of a cult.
The cult's adherents may be irrational. Their god is demanding and finicky
and exacts many sacrifices - in time and money. But Kerschner's belief is
unshakable.
Kerschner, who runs Coatesville's North Star Orchard with his wife, Lisa,
is a member of what he calls "the apple cult."
"There is a cult of fruit-growing that preserves the old varieties,"
he explained. Though "antique," or heirloom, varieties of apples
may be hard to find, there are ways and channels "if you get connected
with those people," as Kerschner put it.
Though most of us know only the three or four apple varieties commonly available
in supermarkets - Red Delicious, Golden Delicious, McIntosh, Granny Smith
- there are perhaps 3,000 varieties in the United States. Kerschner estimates
that there may be 8,000 varieties worldwide.
Plant it and they will come
Ever heard of Gold Rush, Golden Russet or Roxbury Russet? Those are only
a few of the Kerschners' favorites among the 67 varieties that the 11-acre
North Star Orchard grows.
But these antique apples are not as hardy as modern varieties. Kerschner
said he lost about $10,000 this season because of three days of hot weather
right after one of his varieties bloomed. The trees therefore did not produce
any marketable fruit.
Then there are hailstorms, insects and disease that can damage crops. Too
much rain can wash out the flavor of apples. (Kerschner compares apples
to wine grapes, which are affected by growing circumstances, and can have
good years and bad years.) And Kerschner makes it even harder on himself
by choosing to thin his trees by hand, instead of using chemical thinners
- apple trees develop optimum fruit only if you cull some of the fruit early
on.
"We'd like to be making more money for how hard we're working,"
he said.
So why do it? "Because so many [antique varieties] are so superior
to supermarket apples," said Lisa Kerschner. Ike added, "Who wants
to eat a McIntosh for every day of your life? It's a lot easier to eat an
apple a day if you have different varieties."
Lisa Kerschner is more often than not the face of North Star Orchard at
the farmer's markets where the couple sells their fruit (they also sell
peaches, the applelike Asian pears as well as fruit products). She is therefore
the one who reaps the "great reward," as she put it, of feedback
from her customers.
But when the couple started their business in 1992, it was before there
was really a market for their unusual produce.
"We planted and hoped the market would develop," she said. Sure
enough, farmer's markets started springing up, and consumers became more
sophisticated in their buying habits.
She now has an e-mail list of some 500 devoted customers for a newsletter
she started only last year.
Selling the farm experience
Norm Schultz, the farm manager for Media's Linvilla Orchards, agrees that
consumers are becoming more educated.
Generally, though, "most people buy with their eyes," Schultz
said. This, he said, is what has ruined Red Delicious apples, which have
been bred for looks instead of taste. Commercial growers also want durability
from their apples so they can ship them without damage.
Commercial orchards have developed Red Delicious apples with redder and
redder - Red Delicious used to be striped apples - and tougher and tougher
skins.
In addition, Shultz pointed out, commercial growers may store apples for
six months in so-called controlled atmosphere storage - industrial refrigerators
where air quality is monitored - and then ship them three months or more
later. That supermarket apple you buy might be up to a year old. And more
than likely the apple was picked green, which makes it easier to ship. So
what you have is a year-old green apple.
"They may be the prettiest, nicest apples, but they have no flavor,"
Schultz said of supermarket apples.
Unlike North Star Orchard, which has developed its niche in antique varieties
of apples, the 300-acre Linvilla Orchards (with 16 acres of apples) grows
modern varieties, which tend to bear more fruit and are more resistant to
disease. Still, besides Red Delicious and Granny Smith, you will find less-known
apples such as Honey Crisp, Jonagold and Stayman Winesap (Schultz's faves)
- 35 varieties in all. And you can pick them yourself, so you know they're
fresh.
Besides selling its produce in its on-site market and to retailers, Linvilla
makes much of its money from selling the farm experience. Agritourism is
how the farm, which has been in the Linvill family since 1914, gets by.
Schultz said that some 40,000 school children pass through Linvilla each
year. And the farm attracts visitors with special festivals.
This weekend, for example, in celebration of the birthday of John "Johnny
Appleseed" Chapman (born Sept. 26, 1774), Linvilla is hosting an apple
festival, with pony rides, food, face painting and hayrides to the orchards
to pick your own. In October, the farm does a huge business in pumpkins.
The farm has recently added fishing ponds too.
Schultz notes regretfully some local orchards that have sold out to condo
developers. The owners can make more money by selling instead of working
the land. It's hard to compete with what is called progress.
Farming on a human scale
Luckily, some folks, like North Star Orchard's Ike Kerschner, remain stubbornly
committed to the life of the small family farm.
"I think the world would be a better place if all apples were grown
on 10-acre orchards rather than 1,000-acre orchards," Kerschner said.
"There's a scale to all things that's an appropriate human scale. Instead
we have...encouraged a nonhuman scale of agriculture - a business model."
Kerschner realizes that not everyone will agree with his views and passions.
Not everyone worships the same god he does.
After all, he said, "The apple cult isn't something you join, it's
just something you belong to."
North Star Orchard • Ike & Lisa Kerschner
Email: Lisa@northstarorchard.com
3226 Limestone Rd. • Cochranville, PA 19330
© Copyright
2008 • North Star Orchard |