Showing posts with label apple growing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apple growing. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 4, 2024

OLD WALLPAPER AND APPLES: THE DEADLY TRUTH by Marisa Masterson

 

Consider how far we go for beauty. I remember sitting for what seemed like hours so I could have lovely curly hair. The perm smelled and never turned out the way I imagined. Or think about the people who have botulism injected into themselves. All to plump up lips or cheeks.

The wallpaper and the apples are a bit like that. Both involved the quest for beauty. Each could be deadly.

Deadly apples? Is this something straight out of Snow White?

Not quite. What I mean is the quest for a lovely apple, the kind we regularly buy in a grocery store. Once upon a time not all apples went to market looking like that. They might have worm holes from the codling moth. 

The 1800s saw the arrival of that pest to the United States. It hitched a ride on plants brought by immigrants to this country. There was one good way to stop them and grow lovely fruit--Paris Green.

Paris Green! Do you recognize the name? It was famous as a highly desired wallpaper.

The lovely green paper was dazzling. So vivid! So deadly!


It was infused with arsenic. People went slowly insane and some died from exposure to it.



Sadly, the same chemical in that paper was what allowed consumers to buy beautiful apples. Growers sprayed their orchards with Paris Green. I mention this in my novel Martha's Second Chance:


The trees had yet to be sprayed. “Uncle Chet’s apples sold better than some because they looked so perfect. We need to spray the trees before the codling moths lay their eggs.”

Emory remembered her evasiveness as he gripped the sprayer and pushed the rod through the metal tube. A poisonous mist spurted from the nozzle. The liquified Paris Green settled on the early fruit.

That was another reason Chet’s apples had always sold well. He had the earliest fruit in the area. Emory remembered the old man laying a finger beside his nose, signaling he was about to say a secret. “Brought grafts with me, I did. Carolina Reds and Spitzenberg apple trees.”

Carolina Reds were a July apple. It was why Emory was spraying the fruit at the start of summer. Even with the colder weather in May, little green apples dotted the trees. He certainly had his work cut out for him. He had a lot of fruit to spray in a short amount of time.

He would work night and day to finish this for Martha. Above all else, he did not want her working with the poison. She needed to be safe inside the house.

To guard his own health, he wore two shirts—buttoned tightly at his neck—and tied twine around his wrists. Thick leather gloves covered his hands. He had a hat on his head and three bandanas tied over his nose and mouth. Arsenic was nothing to take chances with, and he was forced to do that very thing to produce a lovely piece of fruit.

Wallpaper or apples, neither was quite as beautiful as they seemed. At least, not with the presence of poison.

By the end of the nineteenth century, growers stopped using the poisonous Paris Green. A zinc-based pesticide was invented. It was far less toxic.

Hmm! I wonder, as I bite into a perfect Gala apple, what might be sprayed on it. 


NOW AVAILABLE!

Love comes easier than trust and forgiveness in this second chance romance.

Only one thing mattered more than the apple orchard to Martha, and Emory had been it! Too bad he left her standing alone at the altar the prior year.
Her dying uncle arranged for her to become Emory's mail-order bride. At a loss after her mother's death, Martha grabbed the chance to have a husband and traveled to Oregon to get that. In the end, she has an orchard and not the groom who corresponded with her.
A year was not long enough to forgive Emory for abandoning her at the church. Martha realizes this when she opens her door to see him standing on her porch. Worse yet, he hands her proof that her dead uncle deeded half of the orchard to Emory.

Is there 
any such thing as a true second chance? Will working day in and day out with her former fiance allow Martha to learn to trust the man she never stopped loving?

  CLICK HERE!

Friday, May 22, 2020

Setting A Story in My Own “Backyard”


When I started plotting my latest historical novella, A Bride for Cody, I realized that I hadn’t used my home state of California for a long time. One of my critique partners used to own a commercial apple orchard, and she published a book of recipes related to those years and her experiences as a grower. Those two elements came together, and I made my hero an apple grower. I had hoped to use the actual town where my friend’s orchard is located, but the apply industry in that town happened almost two decades later.


So I invented a town called Acorn Valley (because the native Serrano and Cahuilla tribes collected acorns here) but overlaid it in the valley where the real town of Oak Glen is. Evidence of metates (holes in rocks where the native women ground the nuts) exists in nearby streambeds and the foothills of the Little San Bernardino Mountains. The year that worked for my Civil War veterans (both characters) was 1869, which was earlier than the real town of Redlands was established. But a settlement called Lugonia did exist around a Spanish land grant that Mormons had occupied for a decade before being called back to Utah, proving the land could be valuable farm land. The area was not well-developed, but a short-line stagecoach service existed.


Once I discovered transportation was in service, I knew I could create a realistic story for that year. My writing time was compressed due to successive deadlines. The factor that helped me create the mail-order bride story between individuals wounded by their experiences in war time was the fact that I have driven those hills of my fake town and valley. Years ago, I visited the town of Oak Glen in apple-picking season and have seen what those apple trees look like. My hope is that if any southern California resident reads my story, that person will see I have accurately depicted the region. Now, as I drive in my county, I'm on the lookout for other likely locations.




Blurb for A Bride for Cody, Proxy Brides series #42:


Veteran Cody Sheffield went from surviving the Civil War ended to spending years building the Transcontinental Railroad. Finally, he finds solace on an uncle’s apple farm in southern California. A change in family circumstances demands he seek a bride.


Nurse Riona Gilbride pitched in to do her part when the war came to her hometown of Harpers Ferry. Years later, she’s still tending others when she realizes the time has come to care for herself, and she answers an ad in a matchmaking newsletter.


Expectations and temperaments clash. Soon, both Cody and Riona wonder if their decision to marry without meeting beforehand is a huge mistake.


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