Seasonal & Holidays

Where To Go Apple Picking Near Lake Norman

Apple picking has become as American as, well, apple pie. Here's where to go for that perfect fall Instagram photo in North Carolina.

DAVIDSON, NC — October is special. Leaves show off before they drop, taking on brilliant red, orange and yellow hues. Pumpkins become relevant again. Young kids become their favorite superheroes and villains for Halloween. But it’s also that rare time of year when apples are ripe for the picking, and when people decide they’d rather pick their own than buy them from the grocery store.

If you’re one of those people, consider heading to Sky Top Orchard in Flat Rock, North Carolina, a 2 hour drive from Davidson. The orchard was recently named the best in North Carolina by Reader’s Digest. Here’s what the the family magazine had to say:

“If you don’t leave Sky Top Orchard with a belly full of apple cider donuts, you’re doing something wrong. The warm donuts, dusted in cinnamon sugar, are made using fruit from the 70-plus acres of apple trees out back. There’s plenty to do from going on hayrides to exploring the bamboo forest, and pro pickers recommend getting there early if you want to snag the coveted Honeycrisp apples.”

If that doesn’t satisfy your taste buds — or, let’s be honest, the drive is too cumbersome — you might head to one of the following orchards, compiled by OrangePippin.com, a resource website founded by apple enthusiasts and dedicated to the fruit.

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  • Carrigan Farms, 1261 Oakridge Farm Highway, Mooresville, N.C.
  • Apple Orchard Farm, 640 Mariposa Road, Stanley, N.C.
  • Hill’s Orchard & Vineyard, 4554 Finch Farm Road, Trinity, NC
  • Killdeer Farm, 300 GoforthRoad, Kings Mountain, N.C.

Apple picking has become as American as, well, apple pie. In America, the activity dates to the Jamestown colony in the early 1600s. Settlers brought over seeds from Europe and began harvesting them. According to the History Channel, apples use to be much more bitter than the sweet ones you taste today. Back then, they were mostly used to make apple cider, a popular drink in England.

There are 2,500 varieties of apples grown in the U.S., but only the crabapple is actually native to North America. Most apples are still picked by hand in the fall, and they’re pretty healthy, too. Apples have a great source of fiber and contain no fat, sodium or cholesterol.

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If you’re looking to score some apples, here are some tips from pickyourown.org on how to find the best.

  • Apples will stop ripening once they’re picked, and the apples outside the tree will ripen first.
  • Apples on the sunny side, usually the southern side, ripen first.
  • Look at the color. “Depending on the variety, apples may be yellow, red, green or combinations of these colors at harvest,” the site said. “When the green has almost completely given way to yellow, a yellow variety is mature. With red blush or striped apples, the area where there is no red color usually changes from green to yellowish at maturity. Some of the newer red strains are challenging, because they are red all over long before they are sweet and mature. In these, the change in the color of the flesh goes from greenish to white when they are ripe. Red Delicious spur-types apples are odd in that the greenish tint may take months in storage to disappear, but they are fine to eat before that!”
  • Don’t pull the apple straight away from the tree. Insead, roll the fruit upward off the branch and twist it a little bit.
  • Don’t shake the trees or branches.
  • If apples touch the ground, that’s fine. Just wash them before you eat them.

Patch national reporter Dan Hampton contributed to this report.

Photo credit: Rick Uldricks/Patch


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