Subject:
[adventure!] Olive pickin´!
Date:
1/22/2004 8:24:09 AM
Hola again ladies and gents,
Yes for those of you interested, I am still alive. Very much
so. Presently
sat in an internet cafe in the Alpujarran town of Orgiva
(aka Hippie town).
This place is pretty cool, but the Spanish apparently don´t
like it because
it´s been totally taken over by the international hippie
community, who
apparently represent to the Spanish, the lowest form of life
besides
the environmentalists.
Anyway, we´re here to bring our olives to a small mill where
we can get the
oil immediately. We started harvesting them on Monday and
picked 4 trees in
two days, which produced 250 kg of olives. Most of the olive
mills in Spain
take your olives and give you a receipt for the weight, and
you can decide
whether you want some predetermined percentage of that
weight in oil (not
the oil from your own olives, but the oil of whatever
everyone has brought,
mixed together) or you can just sell your olives to the
mill, which then
sells the oil to a larger company. The result of this is
that most people
who harvest olives beat what they can from the trees with
sticks and throw
in anything from the ground that resembles an olive, to make
sure they have
lots of weight to bring to the mill. There is no incentive
for quality.
The trouble is that olives are relatively fragile and once
they hit the
ground, they bruise and immediately start to deteriorate.
What often ends
up going to the mill are olives that fell off of the tree
months ago and
have sat on the ground fermenting. It´s not nearly as gross
as it sounds,
but still leads to lower quality oil. Which is why the
family I´m staying
with has decided instead to pick the olives from the trees
(instead of
beating the branches with sticks), dropping them onto nets
and then sorting
through them by hand before putting them onto trays to avoid
crushing them
in the big sacks most people use. Then, as I mentioned,
we´ve brought them
to the small careful mill where you get your own oil back
right away (well,
in a few hours).
I am in dog heaven harvesting these olives here. Basically,
I get to climb
trees all day and see how far up and out I can go without
plumetting to my
death on the olives below (well, plumetting to a nasty
sprain anyway). So
far I am unsprained and the proud former owner of a pretty
good chunk of my
head which was removed using the simple and ancient method
of ramming it
into a tree limb. I can still do math, but every so often I
have the urge
to bite the heads off of chickens.
Not sure whether I´ve mentioned this or not, but the
organization that
hooked me up with this family is called WWOOF (World-Wide
Opportunities on
Organic Farms, http://www.wwoof.org).
The other night we had a visit from a couple who also hosts
WWOOFers and
that visit made me realize what a great match I have found
with the family
that I am staying with. Work life in Montenegro (where I´m
staying) is
productive and challenging, but in a very laid-back kind of
way. This is
not a business, I´m staying with a family who wanted some
help with
harvesting their olives and doing some building. We have
breakfast at 9,
dinner at 2, and tea and bread in the evening (German
schedule, quite nice)
and we basically work until it´s too dark out (around 6 or
7) The people who
visited us were a British couple with a very nice WWOOFer
from New Zealand.
Although they seemed very nice, as they were showing us
their records of
man-hours/kg and explaining how they came to their figures
by subtracting
out each 10 minute break, somewhere between the second and
third decimal
place I felt a sudden chill. That could have been me
counting down the
seconds of my coffee break! I settled back into my tea and
smiled.
On a slightly more political note, although the olive trees
we´re working
with are probably 50 years old, well-pruned and cared for
trees can live for
centuries in the mediterranean, and often provide olives and
oil to very
poor people who have little else. It often takes 20 years
before a tree
will produce olives and these trees are extremely important
to the families
who tend them. Driving around this area, you can see some of
the older
trees, beautiful old trees with huge gnarled trunks in which
you can see
what look like ghostly faces. Sometimes the trunks are made
up of 3 or 4
trees that have weaved themselves together. Occasionally on
the news, you
might hear about military bulldozers knocking down olive
trees. Until now,
I have never really understood how devestating that could be
to families and
whole cultures. Just something to think about.
Okay, instead of leaving you on a sad note, let me tell you
some happy
things before the internet cafe guy kicks me out for the siesta.
I bought a
guitar in Granada. My UK passport has just arrived and now I
can officially
stay here forever (excepting of course Jeff and Suzy´s
wedding!). There is
something called Pan de Higo here (fig bread), which is more
of a log than a
bread, but if you can find it at home pick it up. It´s
superfantastic!
Oh, I´ll have more pictures up soon too. Including the
missing ´xmas on a
camel´ pictures, which I found on another memory card.
And, if someone can suggest a way for me to get a cheap old
laptop here,
maybe I´ll write a book or something.
Hasta Luego!
jay