Public hops harvest?

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robertbartsch

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As a small boy in the late 1960s I traveled to Britian (about one hour outside London by car) during the summer and picked hops for several days.

Apparently, back then, factories, stores, closed for a two week period specifically so workers could participate in local hops picking.

We used ladders and picked them from bushes that were 12-15 feet high. The smell of fresh picked hops was not forgotten.

Do they still do this or do they just harvest them with machinery? Hops is an annual plant; right?
 
they do have machiniery for this now but in the case of last year they actually an over abundant amount and it would have costs them more to pick/dry/package it for what they could get for it so they left them on the bine and put out signs for people to come pick their own. After that they burned them down :(
 
So, hops are planted new each year; right? I assume this would allow the harvest machines to whack all the hop bushes down to the stubs.

Anyway, picking was WORK; we did this with our bear hands only for 14-15 hours a day. The only tools were ladders and baskets. My hands were light green in color for weeks.

Luckily, after the experience, I became a CPA and not a migrant worker.
 
Plus after several days of picking I have heard men have been known to start lactating... yes, you read that right! :p (disclaimer, I read this on the webtubes)

Hops are not replanted every year. They grow from a rhizome which is perennial. It is similar to bamboo in that way.
 
Plus after several days of picking I have heard men have been known to start lactating... yes, you read that right! :p (disclaimer, I read this on the webtubes)

Hops are not replanted every year. They grow from a rhizome which is perennial. It is similar to bamboo in that way.

who is gonna fall for that one?
 
Most hops in the US come from a small number of large farms, so the bines are harvested whole and are then stripped in a really weird machine that shakes and slaps the bines to knock the hops loose. My neighbor says that hand-harvesting was common back in the 40s and 50s. There were buses that brought students up from OSU to the farms for the harvest.

Here's a shot of bines being loaded into the harvester.

2113-img_0992.jpg


And one of a drying bin.

2113-img_0999.jpg
 
Most hops in the US come from a small number of large farms, so the bines are harvested whole and are then stripped in a really weird machine that shakes and slaps the bines to knock the hops loose. My neighbor says that hand-harvesting was common back in the 40s and 50s. There were buses that brought students up from OSU to the farms for the harvest.

Here's a shot of bines being loaded into the harvester.

2113-img_0992.jpg


And one of a drying bin.

2113-img_0999.jpg

if they could only put that smell into an air freshener that would be great!
 
Most hops in the US come from a small number of large farms, so the bines are harvested whole and are then stripped in a really weird machine that shakes and slaps the bines to knock the hops loose. My neighbor says that hand-harvesting was common back in the 40s and 50s. There were buses that brought students up from OSU to the farms for the harvest.

Here's a shot of bines being loaded into the harvester.

2113-img_0992.jpg


And one of a drying bin.

2113-img_0999.jpg


i would swim in that sea of hops
 
i would swim in that sea of hops

Then lactation...
Hops are estrogenic hence brewers droop and the dressing of men as women for the hops harvest.

And they are the miracle plant that you have for fifty years and every fall you whack down forty feet of growth and every spring the bines reemerge. Like magic....

OP I would love to hear your stories of the orginal times in England. Pm me

We still use the ladders and bags and copious amounts of beer.

The smell and the resin of the hops are not soon forgotten or removed

Here smell my hands!
 
I don't remember much of the picking experience from +45 years ago. I think the pickers were paid by the number of baskets they produced and $ amounts were probably small. All family members participated from young to old. Much of the town's infrastructure (stores and factories) were closed during this time.

My step-mom, an English born national, said the Euros were 50 years behind America. They heated their homes with coal or peat, not too many with cars, poor highway system, refrigeration was new, etc.
 

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