Olive harvests have been a part of autumn for thousands of years in this Mediterranean region in which we’ve chosen to make our part-time home. The importance of olives and their oil to mankind’s rituals and rights have been recorded since ancient times by the likes of Homer, Virgil, Aristophanes and Pliny the Elder.
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Kalamata olives |
But for us, it is a whole new world – all a part of that daydream, that adventure we’d been seeking -- when we purchased our
Stone House on the Hill in the Greek Peloponnese a couple years ago.
So Harvest Day is a big deal at our house. A Very. Big. Deal. Frankly, we’ve surprised ourselves at how much we love growing olives.
Greece is home to some 520,000 olive growers,
many who use the traditional hand-pick methods.
--- Bloomberg, 2014
HARVEST DAY
It’s been crazy weather here - sporadic downpours mixed with summer-like-temperatures -- so it shouldn’t have surprised us that Saturday morning dawned with a few clouds, some sun and was so hot and humid that you could work up a sweat with minimal amounts of movement.
It was olive harvest day at the
Stone House on the Hill.
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A view of our back garden area -ready for harvest |
We are among those small growers who use the traditional hand-pick methods. Our steeply-sloped property is a section of a decades-old olive grove. The terraces are narrow and steep and not conducive to fancy automated harvest equipment. And, truth be told, there is something about harvesting by hand, as it has been done for centuries, that makes the experience a richer one. That said, it is good we have only 17 trees.
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Part of the crew and their harvest tools |
In reality, that method of harvest is a hard, back-breaking, sweat-inducing experience. The tools involved are as low-tech as anything made in the world today. Our crew this year included two American couples (both are friends and have moved to this area) who wanted to ‘experience’ olive harvest.
The Scout is joined in this photo with Chuck, our friend from the Pacific Northwest and David who hails from New York. David is holding the rake used to gather twigs from the fallen fruit and the other two tools are used for beating the fruit off the branches.
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The harvest begins. . . |
We hired a harvest professional, Aris, and his wife, Donika, (wearing blue and red shirts in the photo above), who take care of the property in our absence. We took our marching orders from them. Some olives are beaten from the tree and others from branches Aris had cut. The process is a mix of harvesting and a first-round pruning in preparation for next year.
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Olive harvest is underway in our area of The Mani |
Netting covers the ground beneath the tree to catch the harvest. . .
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Olives are then put in burlap sacks |
The olives collected, raked and large twigs and branches removed (the machine at the processing plant removes the smaller stuff). . .
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Larger twigs are removed before bagging the remainder done at the plant |
Last year we’d been quite pleased to take almost three bags of olives to the press. It was our first harvest from a previously neglected grove. We were lucky to have any crop. This year was a bit different:
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Our friend Yiannis (pictured) hauled the bags for us
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FROM OLIVE TO OIL
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Then and Now - a striking contrast in olive oil production |
While harvest methods are still tied to the past, the processing of olives has gone high tech. No longer are the olives
pressed as much as they are
processed. The two top photos are of equipment used in the olden days and the two lower are at Taki’s processing plant where we take our harvest. (Taki is monitoring a computer screen that is alerting him to the status – in this case – of our oil being processed).
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Everyone - not just us rookies - take photos at the plant |
Ours was to be the third batch processed Saturday afternoon, we arrived to find our bags ready to dump. . .
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There they go. . . |
The leaves and twigs are separated in the first step and then those pretty little olives become, for a time, a rather repulsive looking sludge that smells like thick rich olive oil. The scents are so strong that you can smell the oil when you drive by the plant during processing hours.
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On the way to olive oil. . . |
The sludge is stirred for a time and then is fed into a horizontal extractor that uses centrifugal force to separate the water from the oil. “
Siga, Siga!,” (Slowly, Slowly!),” Taki said to me about the third time I asked, “Is that ours going into the extractor??!!” From olive to oil took an hour and a half but it was at this point the excitement really started building.
Our harvest crew had gathered to watch the ‘fruits of their labors’ be turned into oil and voila’ . . .
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Oil to the left, water to the right. . .siga, siga! |
Then there was oil. . . .lots and lots of oil. . . 60 kilos, (think liters) or about 20 gallons of oil.
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There is such an adrenalin rush when the oil comes out the faucet! |
‘If you collect them early and are prepared to stock them,
you won’t have any damage
and the oil will turn out to be green, and the best.’
--- Pliney, the Elder, Roman author, AD 23 – AD 79
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Less than 24 hours old - a nectar of the Gods |
Harvest Day was a long day. . .which resulted in a long blog post. Thanks for hanging in there and making it to the end of this one!! And a big hello and thanks to those of you who've written to tell us that you are now following our blog - it means a lot! Thank you!!
Hope to see you back next week when we’ll have some more Greek tales for you from
The Stone House on the Hill. . .
Linking up this week with:
Through My Lens
Our World Tuesday
Wordless Wednesday
Travel Photo Thursday –
Photo Friday
Weekend Travel Inspiration