Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Apple detectives scouring Northwest for ‘lost’ fruits

Retirees have found 13 varieties thought to be gone

- By Gillian Flaccus

PULLMAN, Wash. — The apple tree stands alone near the top of a steep hill, wind whipping through its branches as a perfect sunset paints its leaves a vibrant gold.

It has been there for more than a century, and there is no hint that the tree or its apples are anything out of the ordinary. But this scraggly specimen produces the Arkansas Beauty, a so-called heritage fruit long believed to be extinct until amateur botanists in the Pacific Northwest tracked it down three years ago.

It’s one of 13 long-lost apple varieties rediscover­ed by a pair of retirees in the remote canyons, wind-swept fields and hidden ravines of what was once the Oregon Territory.

E.J. Brandt and David Benscoter, who together form the nonprofit Lost Apple Project, log countless hours and hundreds of miles in trucks, on all-terrain vehicles and on foot to find orchards planted by settlers as they pushed west more than a century ago.

The two are racing against time to preserve a slice of homesteade­r history: The apple trees are old, and many are dying. Others are being ripped out for more wheat fields or housing developmen­ts for a growing population.

“To me, this area is a gold mine,” said Brandt, who has found two lost varieties in the Idaho panhandle.

Brandt and Benscoter scour old county fair records, newspaper clippings and nursery sales ledgers to figure out which varieties existed in the area. Then they hunt them down, matching written records with old property maps, land deeds and sometimes the memories of the pioneers’ great-grandchild­ren. They also get leads from people who live near old orchards.

The task is huge. North America

once had 17,000 named varieties of domesticat­ed apples, but only about 4,000 remain.

The Homestead Act of 1862 gave 160 acres to families who would improve the land and pay a small fee, and these newcomers planted orchards with enough variety to get them through the long winter, with apples that ripened from early spring until the first frosts. Then, as now, trees planted for eating apples were not raised from seeds; cuttings taken from existing trees were grafted onto a generic root stock and raised to maturity.

Benscoter, who retired in 2006 after a career as an FBI agent and an IRS criminal investigat­or, pursues leads on lost apples with the same zeal he applied to his criminal cases.

In one instance, he found county fair records that listed winners for every apple variety growing in Whitman County, Washington, from 1900 to 1910 — an invaluable treasure map. In another, he located a descendant of a homesteade­r with a gigantic orchard by finding a family history she posted online.

Once he discovers a forgotten orchard, Benscoter spends hours mapping it. He has pages of diagrams with a tiny circle denoting each tree, with GPS coordinate­s alongside each dot. A lengthy computer database lists apples including the Shacklefor­d, the Flushing Spitzenbur­g and the Dickinson — all varieties rediscover­ed by the project.

Apples from newly discovered trees are placed in a zip-close bag and carefully labeled with the tree’s latitude and longitude and the date the fruit was collected.

The apples are then shipped to the Temperate Orchard Conservanc­y more than 400 miles away in Molalla, Oregon, for identifica­tion.

There, experts work to identify them using a trove of U.S.

Agricultur­e Department watercolor­s and old textbooks. Once a variety is identified as “lost,” the apple detectives return to the field to take cuttings that can be grafted onto root stock and planted in the conservanc­y’s vast orchard, to be preserved for future generation­s.

The trees could eventually boost genetic diversity among modern-day apple crops as climate change and disease take an increasing toll, said Joanie Cooper, a botanist at the Temperate Orchard Conservanc­y who’s helped identify many of the lost varieties found in northern Idaho and eastern Washington.

She and two others founded the nonprofit conservanc­y in 2011, and operate it on a shoestring, after recognizin­g the need for a repository for rare fruit trees in the U.S. West.

For Benscoter and Brandt, however, the biggest joy comes in the hunt.

Brandt, a Vietnam veteran and passionate historian, last year found a homestead near Troy, Idaho, by matching names on receipts from a nursery ledger with old property maps. Three wind-bent apple trees neatly spaced along the edge of a wheat field were all that remained of the orchard.

Brandt collected the apples, hoping one was the Enormous Pippin, a lost variety he saw listed in the sales ledger.

Months later, he learned he had instead found the Regmalard, a yellowish apple with vibrant red splashes on its speckled skin. It hadn’t even been on his radar.

“It’s a lot of footwork and a lot of book work and a lot of computer work. You talk to a lot of people,” Brandt said, savoring the memory. “And with that type of informatio­n, you can zero in a little bit — and then after that, you just cross your fingers and say, ‘Maybe this will be a lost one.’ ”

 ?? Ted S. Warren The Associated Press ?? Amateur botanist David Benscoter, of The Lost Apple Project, picks an apple in an orchard near Pullman, Wash., on Oct. 28. Benscoter and fellow botanist E.J. Brandt have rediscover­ed at least 13 long-lost apple varieties.
Ted S. Warren The Associated Press Amateur botanist David Benscoter, of The Lost Apple Project, picks an apple in an orchard near Pullman, Wash., on Oct. 28. Benscoter and fellow botanist E.J. Brandt have rediscover­ed at least 13 long-lost apple varieties.

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