Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

How to preserve Bulgarian traditional fruit trees?

БНР Новини
Photo: wwf.bg

Different demographic and social factors have resulted in the abandoning of many traditional orchards in Bulgaria over the past years. This does reduce varietal diversity, depriving us from precious sorts of fruit trees. The Culinary Secrets of Nature 3 campaign will take place in April 2016, as part of the initiative for preservation of traditional fruit tree sorts. The goal is the restoration of the now vanishing Petrovka, Aivania and Buhavitsa sorts of apple trees, enlisted as endangered. The WWF, the Friends of the Vratsa Balkan Club and a chain of restaurants, offering traditional cuisine from the area – these are the initiators. Thus money will be collected for the cause. WWF’s Raina Popova comments more on the subject:

Снимка“When one goes to the grocery store for apples, their origin is rarely questioned. Most often those are not Bulgarian. Only the village yards of our grandparents now host these apple sorts, but not the stores. Hence the initiative, aiming at the preservation of biodiversity and the popularization of those sorts. Anyone can contribute to the cause. You don’t have to be a fruit-grower, in order to create an orchard. We welcome such self-initiatives, but even a few saplings planted in front of the block of flats could support the biodiversity.”

A model orchard will be developed on the territory of the natural park with the purpose of the Bulgarian sorts’ preservation. It will be a demo center, providing information. The garden will be maintained by volunteers so far, but the WWF hopes that one day it will turn into a genetic bank. However, what makes it so important to consume local fruit sorts?

Снимка

“We grow up within the same climate as the fruit trees around, which automatically means we are most suitable for each other in terms of body and immunity. Thus we not only support local business, but we find meaning for ourselves. The goal of the initiative is to reach more people, as consumers are the ones who dictate the rules. We need and look for quality, being ready to pay for it.”

Teacher Georgi Ivanov says the same, as orcharding is his second occupation, inherited from his parents. He grows traditional and less known sorts of apples and cherries in the village of Dragovishtitsa, near the town of Kyustendil. Georgi loves what he does, but admits that Bulgarian fruiters do face difficulties:

“Taste is not looked for these days – people want a minimum of 25 mm in diameter for the cherries, even measuring those. The traditional Kyustendil cherry, really tasteful, has lost its previous positions. Plants should have been opened for the purchase and processing of those fruits, but there is no development. For instance, last year people here produced more than a ton of cherries each, but the purchase centers refused to buy them and closed. The cherries were good for nothing in less than a couple of days. They laugh at us in terms of attitude and prices. I see the solution in the broader advertising of our production. There should be competition and not a single buyer. We can’t compete with the neighboring countries, as cherries ripen earlier there and the subsidies are much bigger,” Georgi Ivanov says in conclusion.

Снимка

 

English version: Zhivko Stanchev

Photos: wwf.bg and Luiza Lazarova


Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

In keeping with the old and new calendar traditions, Babinden celebrated twice in January

Babinden, or Midwives' Day, was once again this year celebrated across the country with songs, dances and ritual re-enactments.  The day of midwifery was marked on January 8, and today, following the old-style calendar tradition.  On Babinden, people..

published on 1/21/25 7:02 PM

The BNR’s QSL cards for 2025 present the beauty of Bulgaria

Dear friends, we are happy to announce that the Bulgarian National Radio’s QSL cards for 2025 are now available. The two series – one with 6 postcards and the other with 12 postcards – are entitled "The Beauty of Bulgaria." The series of 6 cards..

published on 1/21/25 10:12 AM
Screening of a science documentary on an aviation theme in front of museum visitors

Airplanes, seaplanes and space food – stories from the skies collected in the Aviation Museum near Plovdiv

From the first attempts to fly with homemade wings back in the 19th century, to the world's first combat flights with reconnaissance and bombing purposes. From the first successful landing of an airplane with a stopped engine in history, to the world's..

published on 1/20/25 12:48 PM