Long ago the Mission Fathers taught
the Indians to plant and to take care of vines and
fruit-trees. They built water-works to bring life
to the thirsty trees in the dry summers, and to grow
oranges, limes, and figs, as well as peaches, apricots,
and apples. They trained grape-vines over arbors
and trellises round the Mission buildings, and from
the small, black grapes made wine. Olive trees
and date-palms did well at the southern settlements.
But most of these orchards died when the Mission Fathers
were no longer allowed to make the Indians work for
the church property, though a few old palms and olive
trees are still standing.
During Mexican days each ranch owner
raised enough grain or corn and beans for his own
family but planted no fruit, or but little, while
the Americans who came to seek gold thought farming
a slow way of making a living. People soon found
out, however, that our fine climate and rich soil
made good crops almost certain, and there was such
demand for fruit and farm products that more and more
acres were cultivated each year.
Our leading industry now is farming
and fruit-growing, and California’s delicious
fresh or cured fruit is sent all over the world.
Large amounts of barley and hops are shipped from here
to Europe, and our state produces almost all the Lima
beans used in the country.
The citrus fruits, as oranges, lemons,
and pomélos, or “grape-fruit,” are
called, grow in the seven southern counties, or in
the foothills on the western slope of the Sierras.
The trees cannot endure frost and must be irrigated
in the summer. Orange trees are a pretty sight,
with their shining green leaves, white, sweet-smelling
flowers, and the green or golden fruit. About
Christmas-time, when oranges ripen, both blossoms
and fruit may be picked from the same tree. Los
Angeles and Orange County grow most oranges, but San
Diego is first in lemon culture. Half a million
trees in that county show the bright yellow fruit
and fragrant blossoms every month in the year.
The other southern counties also raise lemons by the
car-load to send east, or for your lemonade and lemon
pies at home.
There, too, the olive grows well,
that little plum-shaped fruit you usually see as a
green, salt pickle on the table. The Mission Fathers
brought this tree first from Spain, where the poor
people live upon black bread and olives. Olives
are picked while green and put in a strong brine of
salt and water to preserve them for eating. Dark
purple ripe olives are also very good prepared the
same way. Did you know that olive-oil is pressed
out of ripe olives? The best oil comes from the
first crushing, and the pulp is afterwards heated,
when a second quality of oil is obtained. Olive
trees grow very slowly, and do not fruit for seven
years after they are planted. But they live a
hundred years, and bear more olives every season.
The black or purple fig which grew
in the old Mission gardens bears fruit everywhere
in the state. Either fresh and ripe, or pressed
flat and dried, it is delicious and healthful.
White figs like those from abroad have been raised
the last few years, and it is hoped in time to produce
Smyrna figs equal to the imported.
While peach orchards blossom and bear
fruit six months of the year in the south, most of
this pretty pink-cheeked fruit grows in the great
valleys, or along the Sacramento River. Pears
also show their snowy blossoms and yellow fruit in
the valleys and farther north. The Bartlett pear
is sent to all the Eastern states in cold storage cars
kept cool by ice, and also to Europe.
The finest apricots are those of that
wonderful southern country, miles and miles of orchards
lying round Fresno especially. Yet the valleys
and foot-hills produce plenty, and in the old mining
counties very choice fruit ripens. Apples like
the high mountain valleys, where they get a touch
of frost in winter, though there is a cool section
of San Diego County where fine ones are raised.
Cherries do well in the middle and valley regions,
the earliest coming from Vacaville, in Solano County.
Grapes grow throughout the state,
though the famous raisin vineyards, where thousands
of tons are dried every year, are around Fresno.
Most of the raisins are dried in the sun, but in one
factory a hundred tons of grapes may be dried at one
time by steam. The raisins are seeded by machinery,
and packed in pretty boxes to send all over the coast,
and through the states, where once only foreign raisins
were used. Many vineyards in the southern part
and middle of the state grow only wine grapes, California
wines, champagne, and brandy having a wide use.
Great quantities of fresh fruits are
used in the state or sent away, while the canneries
put up immense amounts, also. Canned fruit reaches
many consumers, but it is expensive. Our cured
or dried fruit, however is so cheap and so good that
millions of pounds are prepared every year. Such
fruit ripens on the tree and so keeps all its fine
flavor. It is then dried in the sunshine, which
not only fits it for long keeping but turns part of
it to sugar. Apricots, peaches, pears, and cherries
are usually cut in halves or stoned before drying.
Prunes are first on the list of cured fruits, and
they seem the best to use as food. The ripe prunes
are dipped into a boiling lye to make the skin tender,
then rinsed and spread in the sun a day or two.
They are then allowed to “sweat” to get
a good color, are next dipped in boiling water a minute
or two, dried, and finally graded, a certain number
to the pound, and packed in boxes or sacks.
Several kinds of nuts grow well in
the state. All the so-called “English”
walnuts, with their thin shells, are raised in the
south, Orange County furnishing half the amount we
market. Peanuts and almonds are a good crop there,
also, though almond groves are in all parts of the
state. Both paper and thick-shelled almonds are
usually bleached, or whitened, with sulphur smoke
to improve their color.
Santa Barbara and Ventura are the
bean counties of the state, and send Lima beans away
by train-loads, while Orange County grows celery for
the Eastern market. Very high prices are received
for this celery and other vegetables sent from California
during the winter season when fields are covered with
snow in the East.
And did you know that the state produces
a great deal of sugar? Tons and tons of sugar-beets
are grown throughout the farming lands, and harvested
in September. When the juice of these crushed
beets is boiled and refined, it makes a sugar exactly
like cane sugar and much cheaper. One-fifth of
the beet is sugar, it is said.
Even the dry, worthless mountain sides
are valuable to the bee-keeper. The bees make
a delicious honey from the wild, white sage, which
grows where nothing else will live. This sage
honey brings the very highest price.
Oats are raised in the coast counties,
and corn in the valleys, but owing to cool nights
and dry air the corn seldom makes a good crop.
Orange County, however, claims corn with stalks twenty
feet high and a hundred bushels to the acre.
In the south, also, that wonderful forage-plant, alfalfa,
will produce six crops a year by irrigation and give
a ton or more to the acre at each cutting.
Along the upper Sacramento River stretch
the great hop-fields full of tall vines covered with
light-green tassels. At hop-picking season many
families have a month’s picnic, children and
all working day after day in the fields and pulling
off the fragrant hops. Indians, too, are among
the best hop-pickers. The dried hops are bleached
with sulphur, baled, and in great quantities sent
to Liverpool, where with California barley they are
used in brewing malt liquors.
An odd crop is mustard, and at Lompoc,
in Santa Barbara County, enough for the whole country
is grown. Both brown and yellow mustard is cultivated,
and the little seeds, almost as fine as gunpowder,
are sold to spice-mills and pickle-factories.
Whole farms are taken up with the
production of flower-seeds or bulbs, with acres and
acres of calla-lilies, roses, carnations, and violets.
The tall pampas-grass, with its long feathery plumes,
gives a profitable crop. Indeed, one can scarcely
name a fruit, flower, or tree that will not thrive
and grow to perfection in our mild climate and rich
soil.