• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer
Umami Days

Umami Days

Cooking in a house on a hill

  • Pick a meal
    • Breakfast
    • Lunch / Dinner
      • Appetizers
      • Salads
      • Soups
      • Main Courses
      • Side Dishes
      • Sweets
    • Snacks
  • Pick your protein
    • Chicken (and other birds)
    • Meat
    • Seafood
    • Eggs
    • Mushrooms
    • Tofu
  • Pick your carb
    • Rice & Grains
    • Noodles
    • Bread
  • Notes
    • Kitchen
    • Dining
    • Edible Garden
    • Food Tales
  • Recipes
    • By Meal
      • Breakfast
      • Lunch / Dinner
        • Appetizers
        • Salads
        • Soups
        • Main Courses
        • Side Dishes
        • Sweets
      • Snacks
    • By Main Protein
      • Chicken (and other birds)
      • Meat
      • Seafood
      • Eggs
      • Mushrooms
      • Tofu
    • By Carb
      • Rice & Grains
      • Noodles
      • Bread
  • Notes
    • Kitchen
    • Dining
    • Edible Garden
    • Food Tales
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Edible Garden / How to make a simple fruit picker

How to make a simple fruit picker

If you want to make your own fruit picker, you only need three things: a pole, a butterfly net and wire to hold them together. See how we made ours.

Green mangoes high up in the tree

The mango tree was already huge when we moved into this house in 2008. It bore fruits but the few clusters were often too high to reach. But we thought that with the sheer size of the tree, it should be bearing a lot more.

Thinking that insects might be eating the fruits even before they were visible to us, Speedy burned dried leaves under the tree in the hope that the smoke would get rid of whatever insects had made their home there. Neighbors advised us to cut off branches to encourage growth. What a mistake that was.

It wasn’t until we got professional advice that we learned that cutting branches had the opposite effect. Fruits don’t grow on young branches. We had to wait for the new branches to mature. It took a couple of years until, finally, we were ready to harvest our own mangoes.

To reach the mangoes hanging from branches as high as our roof, my husband, Speedy, made a fruit picker pole from a length of bamboo and attached our daughter’s old butterfly net on one end. It’s not pretty but it works. Where does pretty figure in anyway? A fruit picker is meant to pluck fruits from the tree, not look stylish for a pictorial.

If you want to make your own fruit picker, you only need three things

  • a pole
  • a butterfly net and
  • wire to holdthem together
A homemade fruit picker

How to make a simple fruit picker

For the pole, choose something lightweight. The fruit picker is heavy enough; imagine when the net is filled with fruits.

Carve one end of the pole to make a groove. This is important; the fruits won’t fall into the net unless they are detached from the tree. That groove will separate the fruits from the tree.

When the groove is ready, position the butterfly net handle parallel to the pole. Make sure that the grooved end protrudes over the rim of the net. Use wire to attach the butterfly net handle to the pole.

Using a fruit picker to reach mangoes high up in the tree

To pluck fruits from the tree, position the pole with the net side up. Push the groove to enclose thefruit stem or the thin branch that holds a cluster of fruits. Twist and tug to disengage the fruit or to break the thin branch. As you twist and tug, flip the angle of the poleso that the net can catch the fruits.

Speedy set his foldable step ladder against the wall of the house and plucked clusters of mangoes here and there. He moved the ladder, positioned it against the tree trunk and picked some more — enough to make mango lassi, green mago salad and mango Margarita.

Green and yellow mangoes in bowl

The ripe mangoes with yellow skin were picked a week earlier while still green. We put them onthe dining table and, after a few days, the skin turned yellow and the flesh had become soft and juicy. The still green ones were plucked from the treeon the day the photo was taken.

Granted, our mangoes are not the biggest nor the sweetest in the world. But there’s an indescribable feeling when you’re holding a fruit that came from your own tree. It’s the same feeling I always get when harvesting vegetables and herbs. A mixture of pride and gratification knowing that we tried to connect with nature and succeeded. Producing and consuming rather than merely consuming.

Maybe, someday, we can have a real farm. For now, we’re happy with our mango tree and otheredibles we get from the garden.

Keep reading

Colorful moth on bedroom wall

Should you get rid of hairy caterpillars (higad) in your herb / vegetable garden?

Basil in pot bathed in sunlight

How to grow and propagate basil

Peppermint growing in a pot

How to grow and propagate mint

Wild mushrooms growing on decaying log

Wild Mushrooms in the Backyard: Edible or Poisonous?

Banana in our garden almost ready for harvest

Fruits and trees in our garden

Home grown mung bean sprouts

Home grown bean sprouts

Last updated on March 16, 2022 ♥ Edible Garden

Previous Post: « Stir fried chicken gizzards garnished with a sprig of rosemary Chicken gizzards and Sriracha stir fry
Next Post: How to grow and propagate mint Peppermint growing in a pot »

Sidebar

Connie Veneracion, Chiang Mai, 2020

Hi, I’m Connie!

Welcome to Umami Days, a blog that advocates innovative home cooking for pleasurable everyday dining. No trendy diets, no food fads and definitely no ludicrous recipe names like crustless quiche, noodleless pho or chocolate lasagna.

Read more →About
umamidays.com
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Contact

Umami Days is powered by Apple, Canon, coffee & crispy pork belly · Copyright © 2022 Connie Veneracion · All Rights Reserved