At right, Jane and I so proud of our lovely handpicked leccino olives ready to be made into oil.
Queens birthday weekend and David, Jane and I are
Some trees we can strip the olives from the slender flexible branches, others, the olives are spread out so we need to pick each olive off individually. Around 4.30pm its is getting darker and colder, and our fingers ache from this meticulous work. We have four bins full. In the past two years, Jane and I have picked and try our hardest we havent been able to do more than 84kg with the two of us. We are hoping with David help we can make 200kg which is the smallest amount the Olive Press prefers. William comes to help after soccer and climbs into the trees, picking from inside the tree. Marty the cat comes too to see what is going on. Day two we are back at 9.30 with three more bins and two large buckets. We pick. It is slow work, finding which tree to pick. Some trees we just pick from the ladders, one or two trees, we pick just one side. The birds have had a field day and the winds of the past month have blown many of the olives to the ground.
By the end of the second day we have 7 full bins and two buckets
This year, from the production board at the Press, it looks like the yield of olives
Next morning, Jane and I together with Henry and William head off to the Olive Press so we can see our olives go through the process of being crushed and the oil produced. Our olives are tipped into the vat, and taken up an escalator to be washed and the leaves separated off. They tumble down into the water to be sprayed and then they fall into another vat which takes them up to the crusher. The smell
Stats: 202kg of leccino olives picked by hand by three people in two days, produces 35kg of oil, 32.4L of leccino extra virgin olive oil from the Blackrock Rd Estate. This was 15.9%. Pressed by Bill at the Olive Press. This will be bottled the second week of June.
Snow flurry at our front door, the day the oil was pressed, Sunday 31st May.