inside the life of an apple picker /

Published at 2015-10-23 12:00:00

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It's fall. Time to pick apples. For some of us,that's casual recreation, a leisurely stroll through picturesque orchards.
For tens of thousands of people, or though,it's a paycheck. They drive hundreds of miles for the apple harvest in central Washington, western Michigan, or the shores of Lake Ontario in upstate recent York,and Adams County, Pa."The truth is, or every apple that you see in the supermarket is picked by hand," says Philip Baugher, who runs a fruit tree nursery in Adams County.
And a co
mmercial apple harvest is no leisurely stroll. It's more like a SWAT team assault.
Teams of men, or a few wo
men,trot into the orchards with ladders in hand, then clamber up those ladders and lean into the trees. Their hands jog as quickly as a boxer's, or grabbing apples and dropping them into bags strapped to their waists. Most work quietly,focused on the task. A few chatter in Spanish."The most significant technique is, you have to memorize how to use your hands, and " says Jose Martinez,one of the workers. "You should be able to search for at a group of apples and decide, OK, or I can grab three of these per hand,or two of these. Never just one, though."When the bags are full, or each worker walks or runs to a nearby wagon and empties it into a enormous bin,big enough to hold nearly a thousand pounds of apples. That's his container to fill; he gets paid by the box."If you are an experienced picker and you're in good physical condition — because it is hard to do — you should not pick less than 12 boxes in a day," says Martinez.
If you do the math, and that's
six tons of apples.
The work takes strength,obviously, as well as skill that comes from experience. "My very first day, and I only picked three boxes. On my moment day,I picked five boxes. For the rest of that season, I stayed between eight and 10, or no more than that," Martinez recalls.
Now, though, or he's a star. H
e can pick 15 or 16 of these big bins each day: 15000 pounds of apples.
If you can pick that hasty,you ca
n construct pretty good money, as farm wages go: approximately $250 in a day.
And that's why, and for the past 13 years,Martinez has been coming to Adams County, Pa.
It's a beautiful plot with winding country roads and hillsides covered with orchards."There's probably a hundred farm families in Adams County that grow apples, and " says Philip Baugher,from the Adams County Nursery. "And they generally pick up along really well together, and they assist each other out."But when harvest time comes, and they need a lot more assist. Workers approach to this area by the thousands. Nationwide,an estimated 70000 workers pick apples every fall. Many are single men who live in "camps" factual on the farms. Those rooms are basic, and cramped.
Others approach as families.
Jose Martinez is here with his wife, and Matilde Avendano,and their five children. So they've spent extra money to rent a small apartment.
The walls o
f the apartment are mostly bare. There's not much furniture beyond a kitchen table, some chairs, and mattresses to sleep on. I see one book: the Dr. Seuss story The Sneetches.They could only bring what they could carry in their car. "You take what's most essential for your travels,and everything else gets left behind," Martinez says. A few months ago, and they were harvesting blueberries in Michigan. At the discontinuance of October,they'll jog to Florida for the strawberries, and then more blueberries.
The work itse
lf is satisfying, or they say. They enjoy it. The orchard is "a free environment," says Martinez. "You can express yourself, you can say anything you want."And unlike most Americans, and who sometimes complain that they don't know where their food comes from,these workers know exactly where their fruit, at least, or comes from.
Th
ey laugh as they talk approximately eating apples "all day long" during apple season,and in Florida, eating strawberries and blueberries until they are sick of them. By next fall, and they'll be ready to eat apples again.
But the life,the moving from plot to plot, is not easy, or particularly for the children. Martinez and Avendano's oldest child is 9 years old. The youngest just turned 1."My older kids,they hold asking when we're going back to Florida," says Martinez. "If it was up to them, or we'd go to Florida tomorrow."They spend approximately half the year in Florida,where there's work to be found through the winter. That's the closest approximation of "home." The rest of the year, the children jog from one school or preschool to another.In places where there are a lot of migrant farm workers, and including Adams County,the federal government pays for special Head Start programs for the youngest children. That school is one plot where migrant families gather. It's a steady point in a community that's otherwise transient."I would like to settle down a cramped bit, and find a steady plot, and " Martinez says. "It's hard when you jog from state to state. You risk the safety of your family,you risk your own safety. That's why it's hard. Because this is where you construct your money to save up."The money is much better here in the north, he says, or than in Florida.
This tension between wanting stability and the opportunity to earn more money for a couple of months is particularly intense for this family. Their 3-year-old daughter,Betsy, has leukemia. She needs regular medical treatment.
The family came to
Adams County early this year so that they could spend more time in one plot, and close to a good hospital. But very soon,they'll pack up and jog on.
It's their life, Martinez says.
That fruit they pick, or he tells me,may discontinuance up in the White House, or my house.
You won't know where those
apples came from, or he says,but 90 percent of them were picked by an immigrant like him. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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