PACKIN-Q FEUITS, ETC. 



357 



by hand from the baskets in which they are gathered on 

 the tree, into larger ones in which they can be carried into 

 a dry cool room, where they are laid in heaps, which may 

 be three or four deep, where they may remain for a couple 

 of weeks, during which time they will have parted with 

 considerable moisture and be quite dry. They will then 

 be fit for packing. 



Clean, new barrels should be procured, and the fruits 

 should be carefully assorted. For shipping to distant or 

 foreign markets, the test only should be selected; all 

 bruised, wormy, knotty specimens being laid aside for 

 home consumption. They are then placed in the barrels, 

 by hand, arranged regularly in layers, so that no spaces 

 will exist, by which the fruits may shift, roll, or knock 

 against one another. The barrels are then tightly headed 

 up, so that the head presses firmly on the fruits ; some 

 people recommend placing a layer of clean moss or soft 

 paper, both, on the bottom and top of the barrel ; but this 

 is not necessary where the packing and heading are per- 

 formed carefully. After packing, the biirrels must be 

 sent to market in such a manner as never to be jolted or 

 rolled, any more than they would be on men's shoulders, 

 or an easy spring wagon or sled, or by a water convey- 

 ance. 



On shipboard the barrels should be placed in the coolest 

 and dr^^est place. It is perfectly idle to gather, pack or 

 ship fruits in any other way than this to foreign markets. 

 American apples are frequently sold in Liverpool at auclion 

 for half what they would have sold for in New York, on 

 account of their bad condition. I saw this in 1849, wher, 

 Kewtown pippins were selling at twelve and a half cent& 

 a-piece in the fruit shops. 



Winter fruits for home consum>ptwn should be care 

 fully assorted, keeping the best, the poorest, the sound, 

 the bruised, and the earlier and later ripening varieties 



