Is Apple Picking a Good Value?
Posted by Lise on 08 Oct 2009 at 10:29 am | Tagged as: frugality
Where I live, picking your own apples is part of a complete autumn experience. I’m no exception – I went apple-picking with my husband and his parents last week, and emerged with a bushel of Cortland and Macintosh apples for fall baking.
I’ve often wondered if picking your own apples is a good value proposition.This past week I shelled out $44 to fill two bags with apples in about 15 minutes. That seems like expensive entertainment! But the question remains if it’s a good value relative to how much you would usually spend on apples. Are you paying for the experience, or just the apples?
At the place where I pick apples, Doe Orchards in Harvard, MA, a 1/2 bushel bag costs $22 each, or $44 for a full bushel. A bushel is a volume measurement, not a weight one, and each individual bag will vary, but by the U.S. Federal standard, a bushel of apples contains approximately 48 lbs of apples. (I believe that, having tried to carry some of those bags).
Let’s compare this to another pick-your-own place, Lanni Orchards, which is just down the street from me in Lunenburg. Here, pick-your-own apples are 75 cents/lb, meaning that those 48 lbs of apples would cost me $36 there. This is less than Doe Orchards, admittedly, but part of the reason I choose Doe Orchards is that it has more trees and a greater number of apple varieties.
Let’s compare it to apples sold at a farm stand. Dick’s Market Garden, also close to me, sells Macintosh and Cortland apples for 99 cents/lb, or $47.52 for 48 lbs. If I had to buy apples on my own, this is where I would buy them – paying $3.52 more than pick-your-own at Doe Orchards, and a full $11.52 more than pick-your-own at Lanni.
And finally, to a grocery store. Macintosh apples are sold for 99 cents/lb at my local supermarket, although they’re marked down this week to 59 cents/lb. At the 99 cent rate, you’d be paying $47.52 for those 48 lbs of apples; but at the 59 cent rate, you’d only be paying $28.32. But at that point, you’re not necessarily buying local produce, which is one of the strengths of pick-your-own and my favorite farm stand.
In conclusion: pick-your-own is not a bad deal for food, but it’s probably a bad deal for entertainment. If you’re the type of person who likes to do a lot of fall baking or canning, it’s a better choice than buying apples at a local farm stand. I guess that makes sense, since you’re doing most of the work yourself.
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I’m not certain why you say that it’s a bad deal on entertainment. Excepting the sale price at the grocery store, your picking price is the same as anywhere else. That tells me that for the same cost not only do I get greater choice (I can pick my exact varieties, the proportions of those varieties, and I can pick fresher apples in better shape than a bulk bag at the store), but I also get entertainment and experience of picking my own, preferably with friends, at no extra cost.
Now if the picking experience is work and not entertainment, and the real value to you comes from the processing of apples, then save the time and effort, and skip straight to the baking and preserving.
Of course, if you let any portion of the apples go to waste, then it is a much less frugal option for both food and entertainment, but I guess that’s obvious.
It’s only a bad value in terms of the fact that I spent $44 to pick a bushel of apples in a total of 15 minutes. It was… kind of a let down, actually! I guess that’s what happens when you go on a weekday in the middle of the season.
Of course, one could argue that the enjoyment extends beyond the picking, to the baking, preserving, and eating of the apples, which is probably not a bad point…