Nevertheless our wild apple is wild
only like myself perchance who belong not to the
aboriginal race here but have strayed into the woods
from the cultivated stock. Wilder still as I
have said there grows elsewhere in this country a
native and aboriginal Crab-Apple “whose nature
has not yet been modified by cultivation.”
It is found from Western New York to Minnesota and
southward. Michaux says that its ordinary
height “is fifteen or eighteen feet but it is
sometimes found twenty-five or thirty feet high”
and that the large ones “exactly resemble the
common apple-tree.” “The flowers are
white mingled with rose-color and are collected in
corymbs.” They are remarkable for their
delicious odor. The fruit according to him is
about an inch and a half in diameter and is intensely
acid. Yet they make fine sweet-meats and also
cider of them. He concludes that “if on
being cultivated it does not yield new and palatable
varieties it will at least be celebrated for the
beauty of its flowers and for the sweetness of its
perfume.”
Pronounced mee-sho; a French botanist and traveller.
I never saw the Crab-Apple till May,
1861. I had heard of it through Michaux, but
more modern botanists, so far as I know, have not treated
it as of any peculiar importance. Thus it was
a half-fabulous tree to me. I contemplated a
pilgrimage to the “Glades,” a portion of
Pennsylvania, where it was said to grow to perfection.
I thought of sending to a nursery for it, but doubted
if they had it, or would distinguish it from European
varieties. At last I had occasion to go to Minnesota,
and on entering Michigan I began to notice from the
cars a tree with handsome rose-colored flowers.
At first I thought it some variety of thorn; but it
was not long before the truth flashed on me, that
this was my long-sought Crab-Apple. It was the
prevailing flowering shrub or tree to be seen from
the cars at that season of the year, about
the middle of May. But the cars never stopped
before one, and so I was launched on the bosom of
the Mississippi without having touched one, experiencing
the fate of Tantalus. On arriving at St. Anthony’s
Falls, I was sorry to be told that I was too far north
for the Crab-Apple. Nevertheless I succeeded
in finding it about eight miles west of the Falls;
touched it and smelled it, and secured a lingering
corymb of flowers for my herbarium. This must
have been near its northern limit.