Fruitful pickings!
150,000 apples picked for charity
Farmers Chandler and Dunn and distributors Worldwide Fruit Ltd team up for The Bread and Butter Thing
‘Final pick’ saves apples from the trees
Working collaboratively with partners Worldwide Fruit Ltd and The Bread and Butter Thing, Chandler and Dunn’s expert picking team have harvested over 150,000 surplus apples for redistribution. The fruit will go to over 24,000 families through TBBT’s award-winning affordable food service as well as other projects including Christmas HAF schemes and council winter support projects across the north of England.
Every autumn there is fruit left on farmers’ trees that hasn’t been harvested for a retailer: this fruit could be too big, too small or not the right colour. Usually it is picked for juicing or used as animal feed. Harvesting this fruit is known as the ‘final pick’, the last of the season.
Chandler and Dunn’s two Kent farm sites include 200 hectares of orchards, and they are one of Worldwide Fruit’s key UK suppliers of apples. Peter Chandler commented: “We are delighted to be supporting such a great cause.”
As part of Worldwide Fruit’s recent partnership with TBBT, the international fruit distributor is continuing to look for new opportunities to reduce the waste of its edible surplus, choosing instead to use it for social purposes. It is working with all its partners to examine in depth elements of its supply chain which generate surpluses that can be eliminated as part of its sustainability drive and net zero aspirations. The first stage of this was to work with Chandler and Dunn to arrange a ‘final pick’ at the end of their fruit season with almost 24 tonnes of apples supplied to TBBT.
As a result of this highly collaborative partnership, the charity has now received almost half a million pieces of fruit since the summer.
Andy Mitchell, Senior Technical Manager at Worldwide Fruits said: “We’re working closely with all our suppliers to ensure that we do everything we can to minimise the waste of our edible surplus. None of our growers want to see their crops wasted and no-one sets out to grow food that won’t be eaten. So this is an important step forward. We know that wasted surplus fruit adds to CO2 emissions and we explore all aspects of our work to ensure that we tread softly on the planet we grow on.”
Mark Game, TBBT CEO added: “We thrive through working collaboratively and with partners who think outside the apple crate and are willing to be flexible in their approach to food surplus. This dynamism and innovation will help us all maximise the benefits of surplus food and support people across the UK who struggle with access to healthy, affordable fruit.”
77% of TBBT’s members say that using its affordable food service enables them to eat more fruit and veg – food that they wouldn’t normally be able to access, either through challenges of local supply or cost. By working with Worldwide Fruits, TBBT is supporting members’ diet diversity, helping people to eat more healthily and a wider variety of food.
And with 150,000 apples to distribute that’s a very fruitful offering! Apple recipes welcome…