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Saskatchewan
Naturally Magazine
Vol
1, No. 3, 2000
A
Rose by Any Other Name:
This Member of the rose family may not bloom with
the same extravagence of its ornamental cousins, but
the fruit of its humbler blossom is worth a family
secret.
by Amy Jo Ehman
The problem
was the map.
We
were seven people in three cars heading to one secret
spot at the end of an unmarked prairie trail. We were
going to pick saskatoons. Our destination was an uninhabited
quarter section on the South Saskatchewan River originally
homesteaded by my great-great-grandfather. Only I
knew the route. And like a true prairie soul with
a private stash of saskatoon bushes, I was reluctant
to reveal the location. Generations of prairie people
have kept this secret. Making a map felt like treason.
"Could
you collect the maps afterward and burn them,"
asked my mother?
I
drew the map.
Picking
saskatoons was a summer ritual of my childhood. In
mid-July, we would load up the truck with empty paint
cans, plastic wastubs and a picnic. We wore long sleeved
shirts and pants, despite the heat, so we could push
deeper into the bushes in search of the perfect tree
where berries hung large and purple like tiny bunches
of grapes (our fingers and lips stained purple by
the juice).
The
reward came in the middle of a harsh prairie winter:
hot saskatoon pie for Christmas dinner.
The
saskatoon berry has been feeding prairie people for
centuries. It grows wild in river valleys where aboriginal
people came in summer to hunt, make arrows and gather
supplies for the winter months. The Cree call the
berry missaskquatoomina. It was an important nutrient
in their diet and a critical ingredient in the making
of pemmican, a blend of berries, fat and dried meat.
They introduced this food to explorers, missionaries
and settlers as they arrived in the western wilds
of the continent.
In
1810, explorer David Thompson wrote in his journal:
"The berry grows abundantly on willow-like shrubs,
is of the color of deep blue, or black; the size of
a full-grown pea, very sweet and nourishing, the favorite
food of small birds, and the Bears. They are very
wholesome, and may safely be eaten as long as the
appetite continues; they are much sought after by
the natives, they collect and dry them in quantities
for future use; and mixed with pemmican, becomes a
rich and agreeable food. The wood is of a fine size
for arrows, and where this can be got, no other is
employed; it is weighty, pliant, and non-elastic.
As this berry is proceeded by a beautiful flower,
and the berry is rich as an currant from Smyrna and
keeps as well, it ought to be cultivated in Canada,
and in England."
In
August 1883, a scouting party of settlers from Toronto
reached their homestead lands on the South Saskatchewan
River. They were members of the Temperance Colonization
Society led by Methodist minister John Lake. Lake
declared it the perfect spot for their new community.
He was about to put the hardy saskatoon berry on the
map.
He
recalled in his memoirs that a young man brought him
a handful of berries: "I asked him the name (for
they looked like red currants) he said they call them
saskatoons. In an instant I remarked, 'Arise Saskatoon
Queen of the North.' We were all very delighted."
The
story brings a chuckle to Richard St. Pierre, head
of the saskatoon berry research project at the University
of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon. He knows that saskatoon
berries are well past their prime in August, and those
that remain are deep purple, not red.
"Given
the time of year and the colour of the fruit that
were brought to him, it really points in the direction
of chokecherries," says Pierre.
"Though
I think that Saskatoon is just as good a name."
The
saskatoon resembles a blueberry in size and colour,
but it is more closely related to members of the rose
family. The fruit is not a true berry, but a tiny
apple. The genus name AMELANCHIER is derived from
a Celtic word for 'small apple'. The saskatoon, AMELANCHIER
alnifolia, grows wild from Alaska to Mexico
and from Ontario to Iowa. It is more commonly known
as the service berry or June berry.
The
shrub was first cultivated on the prairies early this
century, more than a hundred years after David Thompson's
prophetic suggestion. Today, there are an estimated
1,000 acres of saskatoons under cultviation in Saskatchewan.
We wore long sleeved
shirts and
pants, despite the heat, so we could push deeper into
the bushes in search of the perfect tree where berries
hung large and purple like tiny bunches of grapes.
Lee
Whittington's boots are heavy with mud as he walks
through his orchard on Valley Road, south of Saskatoon.
Lee, his wife Grace, and their three children manage
14 acres of saskatoon bushes, supplying fruit for
their line of pocessed foods bearing the label Riverbend
Plantation. They produce jam, syrup, pie filling,
tea, a sparkling non-alcoholic wind and chocolates.
We
walk as we talk and eat as we walk. The berries stain
my fingertips. At the end of a row, a hired picker
is pouring saskatoons from his hand pail into a large
white bucket. Each bucket is numbered and will be
recorded later at the weigh station. These berries
are called smokey. They are more musty than sweet:
grape-like. The smokey is popular because it holds
its flavour during processing.
"This
is probably the most popular variety in Saskatchewan,"
says Lee. "The darker they are, the better they
are."
The
next row is a lower bush called Northlines. These
berries are sweet. Ideal for selling as fresh fruit,
they fetch more than $9 a kilogram. Another row called
Thiessen is juicy, not too sweet, with a musty, earthy
flavour. This is the saskatoon of my youth.
"These
are my favourite," says Lee. "These are
the berries I prefer on my cereal in the morning."
Says
Grace: "We keep them separate because we have
different uses for the berries. Some go into pie filling.
Some go to the fresh market. Some go into jam."
Despite
the modern names and neat, long rows, these saskatoons
are not far from their wild origins. Every variety
in cultivation was started with seeds from a wild
berry chosen for its superior natural qualities. There
has been no breeding program to improve the flavour,
size or hardiness of saskatoons. Only irrigation and
disease control separate the cultivated berry from
its wild ancestor.
At
10 am, field supervisor Linda Wyteck blows her whistle,
calling the pickers into the weigh station. The berries
are weighed and whisked off to the farmyard where
they are cleaned, sorted and -- for berries that will
be processed -- quickly frozen.
The
Whittingons emply as many as 100 pickers during the
harvest. A good picker can collect more than 12 kilograms
of berries in two hours. A daydreamer may get three.
They are paid $1.70 to $2.30 per kilogram.
"We
have a lot to learn about this crop but that's part
of the excitement," says Lee. "It's not
like corn or soybeans where there's volumes and volumes
written about them. You can phone up researchers just
about anywhere in the world and get good information
about those crops. We don't even know the recommended
fertilization rates for saskatoons. It's never been
studied."
The
Saskatchewan government is promoting the saskatoon
as a lucrative cash crop for prairie farmers. It is
funding ground-breaking research to produce a better
berry, and Richard St. Pierre says the economic potential
is great.
"One
of our biggest producers, Barry Isaac at Last Mountain
Berry Farms at Southey, says he could use a million
pounds of fruit every year. He says there's a market
in the United States. But he can't access that market
because there isn't enough fruit consistently available."
Genetic
research at the U of S began with a newspaper ad.
"I
asked people to send me fresh berries from the wild,"
says research Annette Zatylny. She was overwhelmed
with luscious frozen berries. Zatylny is looking for
exceptional qualities from these samples: high yielding,
juicy and resistant to the insects and diseases that
periodically ravage the wild berries.
Seeds
were taken from the samples and grown in the university
greenhouse. The seedlings will be planted in locations
around the province andd be evaluated after five years.
"For
example," says Zatylny, "if we find some
trees that are disease resistant, we'll do some cross-breeding
with other desirable cultivars. This way we'll try
to get a tree that has good fruit and is resistant
to disease."
There
could be a reward for generous berry pickers that
answered the ad: new cultivars developed from their
wild berries would bear their family name.
That,
to be sure, won't be my name. After an abundant wild
harvest shared with friends in 1998, the harvest of
'99 is not good on the homestead. The saskatoon berries
are sparse and shrivelled, victims to common fungus
called entomosporium.
On
the drive back to Saskatoon, I pull of the road at
the sign of the Berry Barn U-Pick. Neat rows of bushes
stretch from the road down to the riverbank. I take
my ice cream pail and start picking. U-pick farms
are making it easier for prairie people to get their
annual stock of saskatoons. Fill your own bucket for
$10: no brambles and no disappointments. It's a small
price to pay for the pleasure of a saskatoon berry
pie on a cold winter's day.
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