The poet Xan Oku (active on Twitter/X) says that flowers remind us why the rain is necessary. On our Blossom Day celebration we had plenty of both, but about 25 people turned out to enjoy the orchard. It is beautiful, whatever the weather. We made artwork using thumbprints for the blossom, and enjoyed the music. The blossom may not have outdone the dramatic clouds above the orchard, but the benefit is that there is still blossom to see. If you have any photos please send them in, we love to see them.
Other news – we think the swifts are back! If you see them please drop us a comment saying the date and time of your sighting.
Our wonderful orchard volunteers from Astra Zeneca spent a slightly rainy day in the orchard on 23rd April 2024. They achieved so much! They used all of their skills to work out how to put new picnic tables and raised beds together and get them installed. They also weeded around the apple trees and added a circle of mulch around them. Mulch can be anything from wood and bark chips to compost – even a thick layer of cardboard will help. The mulch prevents weeds from popping up and reduces water loss, and so keeps the trees from being stressed. Mulches such as compost or bark will also add some nutrients. The small-leaved lime trees also got some mulch. Finally they weeded the stool bed area and set it in to year 2 of the rootstock production cycle. So the orchard is looking gorgeous, all set for our Blossom Day Bank Holiday Monday 6th May 2 – 4pm, and for a lot of picnics throughout the summer. How come even a sandwich and a packet of crisps tastes so much better out of doors?
As I write this I can see the plum trees are coming into blossom in my garden, and the petals are already falling from the little Fuji cherry, ‘Ko Jo No Mai’. We expect so much from this short-lived spectacle, we go in search of it and celebrate its beauty every year. Blossom has been associated with all things feminine, partly because of associations with spring and with the romance of flowers. John Ruskin, Victorian artist and critic, described the women in Pre-Raphaelite paintings as ‘girl-blossoms’. In our orchard, however, the blossom can be enjoyed by everyone. The Woodland Trust has put together a calendar of the blossom times of various trees that you’ll spot in British countryside, orchards and hedgerows. The crab apples usually flower before the domestic apples, and by early May we should have quite a few trees in their best blossom dresses.
Save the date for our Blossom Day We will be in the orchard from 2pm to 4pm. Our folk musician friends, who usually play at our Wassail, will be here in (hopefully) warmer weather to entertain our visitors, and the trees. Last year’s blossom-themed finger-painting activity was so popular we are running it again. We are hoping to provide blossom cakes and treats as well. More details to follow, so keep an eye on this website and our social media feeds.
The word wassail comes from the Norse and old English traditional drinking salute; ‘Was hael’ meaning ‘good health’. The response is ‘Drinc hael!’ or ‘I drink to your health’ – in other words, ‘Cheers’!
Did you wassail? It is the most fashionable outdoor activity this winter, with wassail events taking place across the country, in rural, urban and community orchards of all sizes. What makes this revival so marvellous is that you can wassail any way you like, picking and choosing from a rag-bag of traditions that make the most sense for your orchard and its community.
I have researched and written about wassailing, but there is a lot that we can’t be sure about. Wassailing is a folk custom that can be traced back, in its original form of a drinking toast, to Anglo Saxon times. It became more ritualised from the twelfth century to the sixteenth, and then went through a period where it was not so important, until the Victorians rediscovered it. Although some Victorian commentators (and some modern ones) love to see wassailing as a living remnant of ancient ‘pagan’ rituals, there is no evidence of this. However there are possible connections between the wassail and ancient forms of tree worship.
Whenever and wherever it started, Wassailing has always taken place between Christmas Eve and Twelfth Night, (using either the Old or New calendar dates, according to local preference). The wassail as a way of sharing a drink became a way of celebrating the end of the twelve days of Christmas. During the Victorian era, the wassail was a folk ritual that was celebrated in prose and image more often than it took place on the ground, but it was certainly a living Christmas custom down in the orchards.
Today you can celebrate as we do at Trumpington with mummers, musicians and a lot of singing and dancing. We sing ‘here we come a wassailing’ and we pour apple juice as an offering to each tree. We also hang toast in the branches – toast was put at the bottom of drinking goblets to act as a sort of a filter, and this is where the expression ‘raising a toast’ comes from. Orchards with more space might consider lighting a bonfire, or putting candles at the base of each tree (safety first) but I think the custom of firing shotguns has probably had its day!
We will be holding our annual Wassail on Sunday 14th January from 2pm. The Lord of Misrule will lead a celebration of our apple trees and the orchard. In centuries past, wassailing was a way of asking the trees to produce as many apples as they could. Now, I think it is more of a community celebration, and a moment to think about and celebrate the wider landscape and environment. Whatever you have in mind when you attend, it is a lot of fun and certainly not solemn. Children are very welcome, and we encourage you to dress for the occasion. Cider used to be a big part of wassailing but now we provide mulled apple juice in return for a donation.
Practical details: – please park with consideration to our neighbours in this residential area. please wear outdoor clothing and waterproof shoes. It is a good idea to bring a torch as it gets dark so early. Please remember we have no toilet facilities on site or nearby.
In September 2023, on a particularly hot day, this lovely group of Heineken Volunteers from the Star Pub came to make the orchard look tidy again. If you can, like me, remember advertising slogans from many years ago, my headline makes more sense. We are very grateful for all their hard work and community spirit. Our orchard depends on the dedication and support of volunteers, and we can never thank them enough.
(Health-and-safety note: it’s not a good idea to lean on your scythe blade, even wearing gloves. They are so sharp!)