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History Of The Filbert (Hazelnut)

History Of The Filbert (Hazelnut)

The modern name for filberts has evolved from European folklore. The original name was connected with Saint Philbert’s Day (Saint Filbert), the day that harvesting the nuts began, August 22nd, the day of observing the Saint’s day of celebration. The famous Roman historian, Pliny, recorded that ‘hazels’ (filberts) were frequently gathered by the Romans as food. Pliny believed that filberts (hazelnuts) had originated in Damascus, Syria, where they grew naturally in forests; however, archeological records have shown some fossilized remains of filberts (hazelnuts) that were 5000 years old in prehistoric excavations from China. Almonds are found growing wild today in many European countries and Asia Minor. There, the climates are mild during winter with cool summers near moist soils and large bodies of water like the Black Sea boundaries around Turkey and near the Mediterranean Sea surrounding Sicily and Italy.

The first commercial nursery in the U.S. was established by Robert Prince in 1737 in Flushing, N.Y. George Washington visited this nursery by river barge in the spring of 1789 just after being elected the nation’s first President. During the Revolutionary War, General Washington sent armed guards to surround and protect this valuable nursery that contained American filbert trees and “Barcelona” filbert trees that were imported from Spain. When Lewis and Clark conducted their exploration of the Northwest during the presidency of Thomas Jefferson, they returned with collected specimen plants to be used as nursery stock at Prince Nursery for propagation, research, and sale. Professor of Horticulture and Pomology, Dr. MacDaniels, of Cornell University, did much filbert hazelnut research at a very large nut orchard that he established early during the last century near Ithaca, New York.

Filberts are alleged to conjure up mystical powers by certain cult members and have been thought since ancient times to be used as ‘divining rods’ to locate underground springheads of water, buried treasure, minerals, ores, and as various remedies for illness and ailments of many kinds.

The European filbert (hazelnut) tree, ‘Corylus avellana L.,’ is the world’s most common and commercially advantageous filbert that is familiar and available to markets of today. This European filbert tree grows to 20 feet in orchards when trained into a tree by removing the lower limbs. Orchardists there expect filbert trees to bear after three years of planting and a mature tree averages 20-25 pounds of nuts per year. Two different trees are necessary to insure nut production through cross pollination.

The developing nuts are green in color, but when mature, the nuts turn a chocolate brown; however, the filberts (hazelnuts) are not released from the hull until 6 weeks later, after drying. The nuts may grow in clusters up to 12 nuts, about the size of acorns, and are usually mature during the last week of August, being collected during the last of September. Although filberts are gathered by hand in Europe for commercial markets, they are gathered mechanically in nut orchards of Washington State and Oregon in the United States.

American filberts, ‘Corylus Americana Walt.,’ were described in historical literature as growing among native forests in bush form, although commercially the plant can be formed into a small tree up to 12 feet tall by removing the lower limbs. This filbert tree is very cold hardy, surviving cold extremes down to minus 30 degrees F; Zone 3 to 9, from a range that extends from Maine south to Georgia and westward to Missouri and Oklahoma. The American filbert (hazelnut) tree is commonly propagated by dividing clumps. This filbert tree is very aggressive and can emerge from severely burned over forests to become reestablished from the very woody, large rhizomes that grow about six inches beneath the soil; the American filbert is very shade tolerant and grows in light intensity as low as 1% along streams, woodlands, pastures, roadsides, and forest edges. The tree can produce nuts as early as the second year. Filberts are eaten by mammals, quail, deer, and large birds. The kernels of filberts are used in cereals, confections, candies, cakes, and canned as pure hazelnuts or mixed nuts for sale at Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Christmas. Filbert hazelnuts are also used to flavor soups, to be eaten raw or to be ground into a flour to form a cake like bread.

One report from the University of Georgia farm claims that filberts (hazelnuts) have matured on plants that are located there at the trial orchard.

World production of filbert hazelnuts is dominated by Europe and the Mideast; 75-80% of the world’s nuts are harvested from orchards near the Black sea, bordering Turkey. Another 15% of filberts are produced from Italy and Sicily, and a 2% share of the market comes from Washington State and Oregon.

As a health concern, many people need to reduce their risk for heart disease. The FDA claimed “consuming just 1.5 ounces of hazelnuts per day may help reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease” as part of a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol. Doctors have proven at a Boston, MA hospital health study that states, “men who consumed nuts twice or more in a week had a 47% lower risk of sudden cardiac (heart attack) death, and 30% lower risk of coronary heart disease death.”

Patrick A. Malcolm, owner of TyTy Nursery, has an M.S. degree in Botany and has cultivated almond trees for over three decades.

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Tags: cornell university, roman historian, Filbert, Hazelnut, History
 

What’s on in and Around Nice This Summer

What’s on in and Around Nice This Summer

Spring – the Paris-Nice cycle race ends in style at the Promenade des Anglais in March and the Festin des Cougourdons celebrates local folklore. April is regatta time at the Baie des Anges, while the onset of summer is anticipated during La Fête des Mai – picnic hampers at the ready please.

Summer – music lovers rejoice; the Sacred Music festival rings throughout the churches of the old town and free concerts take place thought Nice in June. Jazz is the order of the day in July, when Nice Jazz Festival comes to town, while Bastille Day is a huge celebration on July 14th. Meanwhile, August brings concerts in the Cloister of the Cimiez monastery.

Autumn – bargain lovers should watch out for the Fête de la San Bertoumieu in September, a huge market of traditional arts and crafts in old Nice. And October offers not only Halloween celebrations, but the return of the International Festival of Military Music.

Winter – February is carnival time in Nice and you can expect Mardi Gras and flower processions to liven up the French Riviera’s winter season. Closing parades will include bonfires and fireworks displays best seen from the Promenade des Anglais.

Of course, the Côte D’Azur is also home to Cannes‘ notorious film festival, when the razzle dazzle of the French Riviera is showcased in a week-long celebration of the showbiz world’s famous, infamous and up-and-coming. The event, this year celebrating its 60th anniversary, takes over the region between May 16th and 27th – a party not to be missed.

Car Hire 3000 offer car hire in Nice, and throughout France and the rest of the world at great prices with no cancellation, amendment or credit card fees.

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Tags: Nice, What's, Summer, This, Around
 

Fascinating Austin Ghost Tours

Fascinating Austin Ghost Tours

History and fantasy rolled into one. Every old town or city will have its share of history, legends, and ghost stories along with it. Each place is the subject of legends of old and these legends make up the core of ghost tours that thrive on the fascination of a lot of people with folklore. Austin is no exception and has its share of Austin ghost tours.

With its old buildings and structures, Austin is not only historic, it can even be legendary, and with legends, expect ghosts and monsters along with them. For the thrill seekers, there are Austin ghost tours that take them to the historic buildings of Austin to see and ‘feel’ for themselves the legends behind the facts. From the founding of Austin as the capital of Texas, it has had its share of stories, folk lore and legends that inevitably point to ghosts and spirits that continue to haunt to this day. The colorful past metamorphosing into the present, with exciting and even frightening stories, these are the attractions of the Austin ghost tours.

Austin ghost tours are walking tours that take you through the oldest and most historic of Austin’s buildings where you retrace history with tour guides and ‘the spirits’. A regular stop is the Driskill Hotel on the corner of Sixth and Brazos. More than a century into its opening in 1886, the ghost of its founder Colonel Driskill remains to care-take the building. Watch out for that smoke wafting along your way; it’s probably from Colonel Driskill’s trademark cigar. Sharpen your senses to hear and feel the bouncing ball that the ghost of a four-year old girl who died in the hotel is playing with. Watch as goose-bumps sprout all over you as you sense the spirits hovering as you tour the hotel’s aisles and rooms.

The ghost tour will take you on the Capitol Tour, too, which covers the Capitol, even the Driskill Hotel, and the Governor’s Mansion. Feel the presence of the late leaders of the State who used to work on these structures and have not abandoned them even after their deaths. There is the Ghosts of the Warehouse District Tour; this takes you through the oldest city buildings especially those that have been the site of some of Austin’s most mysterious murders in the 1800s. You are led on a tour of ancient buildings with the Sixth Street Pub Crawl tour, through the entertainment district which naturally had its share of chaos and mayhem in the past, with bar brawls ending in killings and the ghosts remaining there. Then there is the Servant Girl Annihilator Tour, based on the story of the serial murders of maids and servants in the late 1800s.

If you are up to it, there are combination tours that take you through the most chilling of sites and legends, sampling each of the aforementioned tours. These combo tours are usually fully booked on Halloween nights so be sure to reserve in advance.

Check out the Austin registry at (512) 853-9826 for these Austin ghost tours or go online searching for the ghosts of Texas for more info and bookings.

Joe Cline writes articles for REMAX Capital City. Other articles written by the author related to Remax Austin and Lakeway Texas can be found on the net.

A really good halloween clip that doesn’t get the attention it really deserves, I think. Great for parties, barmitzvahs, festivals and/or fairs and all other events of that nature. (Given that they are in fact near to All Hallows Eve, of course)
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Tags: Ghost, Austin, Fascinating, Joe Cline, Tours
 
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