Now Forage

🍎

Apple · Asian pear · Blueberry · Butternut · Common hazel · Fig · Forest garden · Lingonberry · Mulberry · Pear · Persimmon · Plum · Quince · Salal · Salmonberry

📍 3950 15th Ave S, Seattle, WA 98108, USA
AppleAsian pearBlueberryButternutCommon hazelFigForest gardenLingonberryMulberryPearPersimmonPlumQuinceSalalSalmonberry Public
🗓 Season: August · September · October · November · July · June · May
🔍 When is it ripe?
Apple: Background colour changes from green to yellow or cream (variety determines final colour). Seeds inside should be brown. Flesh yields slightly to thumb pressure. A ripe apple releases with a gentle upward twist — no pulling. Check the ground for natural drops.
Asian pear: Round, yellow-bronze skin. Unlike European pears, eat when still firm — they do not soften at room temperature. Ripe when colour develops fully and a sweet fragrance is detectable. Crisp, juicy flesh.
Blueberry: Deep blue-purple with a silvery bloom; stem scar (not stem) at the top. Taste is the best test — a truly ripe blueberry is sweet and has no pink flesh inside. Let the cluster go fully blue before picking the whole thing.
Butternut: Elongated green husks turn brown-black and fall. Wear gloves — stains like black walnut. Cure for 2–3 weeks. Mild, oily, and buttery — not as strong as black walnut.
Common hazel: Husk browns and pulls back; nuts shake free. Gather daily from the ground before squirrels. Dry well before storing.
Fig: Hangs heavily and droops at the neck; skin softens and may split. A sweet drop of nectar at the base eye and the absence of white sap at the stem confirm ripeness. Pick with a gentle twist.
Mulberry: Ripe when fully coloured (white, red, or black by species) and falls at a touch. Spread a sheet and shake the branches. Extremely perishable — process or eat immediately.
Pear: Unlike apples, pears ripen from the inside out. Harvest when the skin colour lightens and the fruit separates with a gentle upward twist. Ripen off the tree at room temperature — leave on a counter until the neck yields to thumb pressure.
Persimmon: Non-astringent types: eat when orange and firm. Astringent types: wait until very soft and wrinkled. Both fully orange when ripe.
Plum: Colour fully develops (purple, red, or yellow by variety) and a waxy bloom appears on the skin. Softens slightly at the tip. Taste-test for sweetness — European plums are better slightly soft; Japanese types can be harvested firmer.
Quince: Yellow, fragrant, and very hard when ripe — not soft like apples. Look for a deep golden-yellow colour and a strong quince aroma. Inedible raw (very astringent); excellent for jam, paste, and jelly after cooking.
Beacon Food Forest http://beaconfoodforest.org/
1
Views
0
🍃 Yes reports
0
🚫 No reports
0
Notes
🗺 Open on map
Recent sightings 0

No sightings yet. Be the first to report!

Tree notes 0

No notes yet.