Looking for wild sour oranges
Posted: Thu Feb 08, 2024 4:29 am
I'm talking about those big beautiful thick-skinned oranges that grow wild in the Florida woods which will lock your jaw right up if you peel one and chow down. Not the puny dried-up tangerine-looking things that grow in old abandoned citrus groves. And definitely not some tree growing in the woods that folks say has "the sweetest fruit".
When ah say sour, boy, ah mean SOUR!
They're scattered through the undisturbed woods across Florida. There's a bunch at Highlands Hammock SP and at the Chassahowitzka River Campground but places like that are heavily overpicked. I know of a spot where there's a few way the heck out in the Upper Hillsborough WMA but it's a long wet hike out to that place.
I'm looking for somewhere I can pick a 5-gallon bucketfull or two without having to trek all over Hell and gone to get them. Legal access only, or at least a very low chance of being busted for trespassing/poaching or getting shot.
Your finder's fee will be a true Florida Cracker sour orange pie (graham cracker crust and meringue not whipped cream, thank you very much) and a bottle of orangecello.
I live in Sarasota and travel frequently to Polk County via either I-75/I-4 or through Myakka/Duette and the phosphate mines. The Law of Diminishing Returns means that the closer to my AO, the better. Feel free to PM me if you'd rather not disclose the location publicly. Thanks!
When ah say sour, boy, ah mean SOUR!
They're scattered through the undisturbed woods across Florida. There's a bunch at Highlands Hammock SP and at the Chassahowitzka River Campground but places like that are heavily overpicked. I know of a spot where there's a few way the heck out in the Upper Hillsborough WMA but it's a long wet hike out to that place.
I'm looking for somewhere I can pick a 5-gallon bucketfull or two without having to trek all over Hell and gone to get them. Legal access only, or at least a very low chance of being busted for trespassing/poaching or getting shot.
Your finder's fee will be a true Florida Cracker sour orange pie (graham cracker crust and meringue not whipped cream, thank you very much) and a bottle of orangecello.
I live in Sarasota and travel frequently to Polk County via either I-75/I-4 or through Myakka/Duette and the phosphate mines. The Law of Diminishing Returns means that the closer to my AO, the better. Feel free to PM me if you'd rather not disclose the location publicly. Thanks!