Pschytsophrenic Apple

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  • poolhound
    Veteran Member
    • Mar 2006
    • 3196
    • Phoenix, AZ
    • BT3100

    #1

    Pschytsophrenic Apple

    So LOML came back from the store having bought some fruit and veg and amongst the apples was this one that obviously has a personality disorder.

    The different coloring is split virtually down the middle.

    Any ideas how this happened?
    Attached Files
    Jon

    Phoenix AZ - It's a dry heat
    ________________________________

    We all make mistakes and I should know I've made enough of them
    techzibits.com
  • Bruce Cohen
    Veteran Member
    • May 2003
    • 2698
    • Nanuet, NY, USA.
    • BT3100

    #2
    Good Photoshop work, not great, but pretty darn good

    Bruce
    "Western civilization didn't make all men equal,
    Samuel Colt did"

    Comment

    • poolhound
      Veteran Member
      • Mar 2006
      • 3196
      • Phoenix, AZ
      • BT3100

      #3
      Originally posted by Bruce Cohen
      Good Photoshop work, not great, but pretty darn good

      Bruce
      I jest you not but this is 100% real. pics are straight from the camera.

      P.S. My photoshop is much better than this :-)
      Jon

      Phoenix AZ - It's a dry heat
      ________________________________

      We all make mistakes and I should know I've made enough of them
      techzibits.com

      Comment

      • leehljp
        The Full Monte
        • Dec 2002
        • 8760
        • Tunica, MS
        • BT3000/3100

        #4
        I wouldn't have a problem with that being in Japan. They often bag each and every apple (and other fruit) on special trees to keep the bugs off and to achieve certain colors - which is done at specific times. I have seen logos place on them and them pulled off at picking time. But these are expensive fruit that are treated that way.
        Hank Lee

        Experience is what you get when you don't get what you wanted!

        Comment

        • shoottx
          Veteran Member
          • May 2008
          • 1240
          • Plano, Texas
          • BT3000

          #5
          Sunlight!
          Often in error - Never in doubt

          Mike

          Comment

          • Tom Slick
            Veteran Member
            • May 2005
            • 2913
            • Paso Robles, Calif, USA.
            • sears BT3 clone

            #6
            obviously the tree was grafted by a skilled cosmetic surgeon.

            Is it half gala half fuji?
            Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison

            Comment

            • Uncle Cracker
              The Full Monte
              • May 2007
              • 7091
              • Sunshine State
              • BT3000

              #7
              I'd be willing to bet that some type of very stable shading element had much to do with this. Red color in apples depends on development of anthocyanin pigments, and these are greatly affected by light exposure.

              Comment

              • gsmittle
                Veteran Member
                • Aug 2004
                • 2793
                • St. Louis, MO, USA.
                • BT 3100

                #8
                The reason is obvious: this poor apple wasn't loved by its parents and was probably abused as a seedling-leading to a split personality.

                Or that chemistry thingy that UC said...

                g.
                Smit

                "Be excellent to each other."
                Bill & Ted

                Comment

                • Martin
                  Established Member
                  • Jun 2005
                  • 119
                  • Carrollton, TX, USA.
                  • BT3100; Antique Delta 8" tilting table

                  #9
                  Sunlight on apples

                  Years ago, the National Geographic magazine photographers had a project to photograph different fruit growth cycle. The first year insects and birds damaged the subject fruit. So, next year the lab carefully crafted some Plexiglas boxes over some selected blossoms and the cameras operated on a clock cycle to photograph the growth cycle of the apples.
                  At the end of the growth cycle and at harvest time the photographers had several Plexiglas boxes of very nice mature green apples. The Plexiglas had blocked the appropriate wavelength of sunlight.
                  On the third year of the project, they got it right with glass boxes.
                  INDECISION IS THE KEY TO FLEXIBILITY

                  Comment

                  • shoottx
                    Veteran Member
                    • May 2008
                    • 1240
                    • Plano, Texas
                    • BT3000

                    #10
                    Japan has again shown off one of its greatest innovations - square watermelons. But 20 years ago a forward-thinking farmer on Japan's south-western island of Shikoku solved the problem.

                    The farmer, from Zentsuji in Kagawa prefecture, came up with the idea of making a cube-shaped watermelon which could easily be packed and stored.

                    To make it happen, farmers grew the melons in glass boxes and the fruit then naturally assumed the same shape. Today the cuboid watermelons are hand-picked and shipped all over Japan.
                    Attached Files
                    Often in error - Never in doubt

                    Mike

                    Comment

                    • poolhound
                      Veteran Member
                      • Mar 2006
                      • 3196
                      • Phoenix, AZ
                      • BT3100

                      #11
                      cool watermellons, I should try this with my lemon tree, that way I could get consistently sized slices
                      Jon

                      Phoenix AZ - It's a dry heat
                      ________________________________

                      We all make mistakes and I should know I've made enough of them
                      techzibits.com

                      Comment

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