Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Tree that bears 40 different fruit: magical-looking plant produces v

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Tree that bears 40 different fruit: magical-looking plant produces v

    Tree that bears 40 different fruit: magical-looking plant produces
    varieties of peaches, plums, apricots, cherries

    18:40 * 25.07.14


    Incredible 'magical' trees that bear 40 different varieties of fruit have
    been popping up all over US, the Daily Mail reports.

    These trees - which can simultaneously produce different varieties of
    peaches, plums, apricots, nectarines and cherries - look ordinary
    throughout most of the year.

    But in spring, they bloom into a stunning patchwork of colors, with each
    tree featuring its own unique selection of stone fruit.

    They are the work of Syracuse University sculptor and artist Sam Van Aken
    who created the trees in an attempt to make people reconsider how food can
    be produced.

    The project began in 2008 when Mr Van Aken discovered that a New York state
    orchard, which held varieties of stone fruit 200-years-old, was to be
    abandoned.

    In hopes of saving it, the artist bought the orchard, and soon after
    started experimenting with something known as 'chip grafting.'

    The process involves taking a sliver off a tree, including the bud, and
    inserting that into a cut in the working tree.

    The foreign tree part is then taped and left to heal over the winter. Mr
    Van Aken explained that most stone-fruits are easily compatible.

    What he came up with is 'The Tree of 40 Fruit', which is in fact, not one
    tree, but a series of hybridised fruit plants.

    So far, Mr Van Aken has created and placed 16 trees in museums, community
    centres and private art collections around the U.S..

    In spring, the trees blossom in shades of pink, crimson and white, and in
    summer, they bear a range of stone fruit.

    'I've been told by people that have [a tree] at their home that it provides
    the perfect amount and perfect variety of fruit,' Mr Van Aken told Lauren
    Salkeld at Epicurios.

    'So rather than having one variety that produces more than you know what to
    do with, it provides good amounts of each of the 40 varieties.

    'Since all of these fruit ripen at different times, from July through
    October, you also aren't inundated,' he said.

    Mr Van Aken's trees can be seen in cities across the U.S., including Santa
    Fe, New Mexico; Short Hills, New Jersey; Louisville, Kentucky and Pound
    Ridge, New York.


    http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/07/25/tree/

Working...
X