Berried Treasure
Why is horticulturalist Harry Jan Swartz so determined to grow an exotic strawberry beloved by Jane Austen?
- By David Karp
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2006, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
By the second morning of my Florida visit, Swartz has identified three musk hybrids with promising characteristics. From one plant, he clips runners and wraps them in moist paper towels; he'll take them back to his greenhouse in Maryland and propagate them into genetically identical offspring—clones. From another plant he plucks unopened flowers, pulls off the pollen-coated anthers and drops them into a bag, for direct use in pollinating other plants to make new crosses. "It's really cool," he says. "After seven years of hard work, I can actually eat this and show people—here's a large-sized fruit with this flavor."This past spring, Swartz says he made further progress at a test plot in Virginia after he crossed a bland commercial strawberry with his hybrids and obtained more new plants with good moschata flavor. Swartz says he's about three or four years from developing a musk hybrid with commercially competitive yield, size and shelf life. Still, he may have a hard time bucking the American fruit marketing system's demand for varieties that appeal to the lowest common denominator of taste. But he has always been motivated less by financial gain than by curiosity, the promise of a bit of adventure—and a touch of obsession. "I really don't care if this works or not, it's just so much fun getting there," he says. "When it happens, it'll be, 'I've found the holy grail, now what do I do with it?'"
David Karp, a freelance writer and photographer specializing in fruit, is working on a book about fruit connoisseurship.
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Comments (3)
I too fell in love with gourmet strawberries over 20 years ago. This includes fraises des bois, virginia strawberries and musk strawberries. I own a small nursery where I conduct research on varieties of these species and sell seeds of alpines (fraises des bois) and plants of all three species. My ecommerce site is at www.thestrawberrystore.com. Come visit and learn about these wonderful plants at other sites that I own at www.fraisesdesbois.com and www.muskstrawberries.com.
Mike Wellik
Posted by Michael Wellik on February 28,2010 | 12:36 PM
I saw musk strawberries advertised in a local gardening catalog (Raintree Nursery) and was wondering what they were. Thanks for the informative article!
Posted by Davina on May 22,2009 | 10:09 PM
During the 1970's and 80's I was working in Germany and often rode out on my bicycle into the countryside around the places where I was living at the time. In the woods and forests, I would pick wild fruits and quite often I came across wild strawberries. Which had the most exquisite taste. I used some of them to make jam and desserts. The ones that had the most delicious flavour were those that I picked in the Black Forest in the vicinity of Schopfheim. I believe they would be the very berries mentioned in your article. The aroma and taste is with me still and a bowl full in my kitchen, would scent the whole of my apartment. How I wish I could get them today. Yours truly. Ken Jackson.
Posted by Kenneth V. Jackson on July 6,2008 | 05:42 AM