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  2. 10 apple orchards where you can pick your own in North ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/10-apple-orchards-where-pick...

    The state’s apple harvest will be significantly smaller this year because of late cold snaps, but these orchards offer pick-your-own options. 10 apple orchards where you can pick your own in ...

  3. It's apple season: Here are four places in North ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/apple-season-four-places-north...

    The apple season is beginning at local farms on Labor Day Weekend. Where you can pick your own, plus one farm that's not offering pick your own. It's apple season: Here are four places in North ...

  4. 30 farms, orchards to pick your own Hudson Valley apples - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/29-farms-orchards-pick-own...

    Despite some extremely adverse weather in 2022, The New York Apple Association is expecting a robust season for New York-grown apples.

  5. J.W. Jung Seed Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J.W._Jung_Seed_Company

    The J.W. Jung Seed Company is a family-owned and operated garden seed company founded in 1907 in Randolph, Wisconsin by John William "J.W." Jung. [1] The company publishes several seed catalogs including Jung Seed, Totally Tomatoes, Vermont Bean Seed Company, Edmunds Roses, Roots & Rhizomes, R. H. Shumway, McClure & Zimmerman and HPS Seed. [2]

  6. You-Pick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You-Pick

    A You-Pick ("U-Pick") or Pick-Your-Own (PYO) farm operation is a type of farm gate direct marketing (farm-to-table) strategy where the emphasis is on customers doing the harvesting themselves and agritourism. [1] A PYO farm might be preferred by people who like to select fresh, high quality, vine-ripened produce themselves at lower prices.

  7. Northrup-King - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northrup-King

    This made Northrup, King and Co. one of the first seed companies to use branding as a marketing technique. [3] Corn hybrids became a major part of the company's business in the 1930s. In 1938, Northrup, King and Co. partnered with the University of Minnesota to test the company's hybrid corn varieties at Femco Farms in the Red River Valley.