Don Justus has seen people do just about anything to take home some of his apples. In his youth, ladies from a visiting church group refused brown bags, opting instead to fashion their bloomers into larger, sturdier carriers.
Recently, a family who’d driven up from Columbia, S.C., donned matching rain boots, coats and hats, and picked apples together in the midst of a heavy storm.
As a fourth-generation Henderson County apple farmer, Justus knows how to grow a delicious apple. He grows, in fact, around 18 different apples. It's his knowledge that keeps generations of families coming back for more. “They make it an annual trip,” he says. “A fun day out in the country with the family.”
Ready for an apple adventure?
Justus Orchard is located at 187 Garren Road in Hendersonville, about three miles off of Highway 64. A newly constructed covered picnic shed sits just off the apple house where visitors can enjoy baked goods, a cup of cider or even a cider slushie. Or, the Justus family invites you to bring a picnic lunch and stay for the day and a wagon ride (offered on the weekends).
Justus isn’t the only orchard in full-swing now. There are lots to see — after all, Henderson County grows 65 percent of the state’s apples. The North Carolina Apple Festival will be held in Hendersonville, Sept. 3 – 6. The festival kicks off with an Apple Orchard Tour, on which Justus Orchard will be the third and final stop. The tour takes place on Friday, Sept. 3, from 9 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. For more information or to sign up, call 697-4897.
To find more orchards, as well as tailgate markets with local apple vendors, visit ASAP’s online Local Food Guide at buyappalachian.org and search by product. To contact Justus Orchard, call 243-7235.
Justus' mother started a u-pick option for their apple business in 1968. Some visitors pick themselves, while others come for pre-picked pecks.
The majority, he notes, come for one of Justus Orchard’s Mutsus varieties, a mix of a Golden Delicious and Japanese Indo. The popular apple was patented in Japan in 1949. As Henderson County Extension Agent and apple specialist Marvin Owings recalls, the first commercial Mutsu was planted in our area by a Saluda grower in the late 1970s. Justus says that Mutsus aren’t quite sweet as Goldens, and not as tart as Granny Smiths. His personal favorite, however, is the Jonagold. Like the Mutsu, it’s not too sweet or too tart. And, it’s a good variety for both storing and baking.
If you’re looking to make a pie or applesauce, don’t limit yourself to just the Jonagold or another similar apple. “The more variety you throw into the pot, the better the flavor’s going to be,” Justus encourages.
Justus Orchard’s newly expanded bakery utilizes a mix of apples for baked goods. Justus and his family started making fried pies about three years ago in response to visitor requests. Since the pies were such a big hit, they’re now a permanent fixture. The orchard bakers also turn out apple cider donuts, made with their Justus Orchard cider. It's just another tasty treat you can pick up while apple-picking.
Think twice, though, before stereotyping Justus’ wife, Margo, as the baker. “This is a family operation, and we all do multiple jobs,” he shares. “One day she may be in the kitchen baking, the next day I may be in the kitchen while she’s out on the forklift.”
Ripening Schedule
Ripening Schedule
Gala: August
Honeycrisp: August
Golden Delicious: early September
September Wonder (early Fuji): early September
Red Delicious: early September
Candy Crisp: early September
Ambrosia: early September
Mutsu: mid-September
Cameo: mid-September
Jonagold: mid-September
Stayman Winesap: mid-September
Rome: mid-September
Hampshire Mac: mid-September
Ruby Jon: mid-September
Fuji, Granny Smith, Pink Lady, Gold Rush and Arkansas Black varieties will be ready for picking and buying in October. Note: According to Don, the heat is causing the apples to ripen about one to two weeks earlier than usual. If you’re looking for a specific variety, you may want to call his farm, or any orchard your visit, ahead of time. Schedule from JustusOrchard.com.
Their son, Cory, is also a vital farmhand. “When he was a child, he would rather ride on the tractor than play video games or watch TV,” Justus says. Now 21 and finishing basic law enforcement training, he has intentions of keeping a police schedule that also allows him to be the fifth generation on the farm.
Don’t be surprised if, while up at the apple house buying a fried pie, cider, or even boiled peanuts, you run into the third Jutus generation, Don’s mother and father. They’re still involved, but the orchard looks much different now than it once did under their care. “My grandfather may have planted 25 to 30 trees per acre, and they’d get as big as a maple tree,” Justus says. “My dad had 150 to an acre, and now we plant over 500 to an acre.” Today’s 30-acre orchard is planted with dwarf trees, which, he notes, are easier to pick and manage.
The apple house and orchard are fully ramped up now, with the majority of their apple varieties available (see an abbreviated ripening chart in the sidebar). You’ll find sign markers indicating the variety at the end of each row, should you venture out to pick your own. Well, at least Justus hopes you will. “For whatever reason, [the signs] have a tendency to grow legs and walk off every fall.”
Justus also offers u-pick and already picked blackberries and peaches. While there may be a few blackberries left, the peaches would be a stretch to find now, he says. Do mark your calendars for their u-pick pumpkins, another new addition this year. The patch will be ready for visitors in October.
— Maggie Cramer is the Communications Coordinator at ASAP (asapconnections.org). Contact her at maggie@asapconnections.org.