Skip to main content

100 Things To Do In Holland Before You Die: #22 -Sip A Cider And Taste A Pie At Crane's In The City

Alright, so this one is kind of cheating - It's not actually at the Holland establishment, Cranes In The City, but it's at Crane's Orchards south of town in Fennville.  BUT, this orchard visit is called out in the footnotes of Ms. Bareman's 100 Things To DoCranes In The City has been in Holland since 2010 (Bareman), and they do offer snacks and drinks, as well as a host of apple-themed gifts.  It's absolutely wonderful to be around orchards and the like - south and west of Holland around Fennville, Glenn, and Ganges; then north of town in Chester Township and into northern Kent County.

I've definitely gotten sandwiches at Crane's In The City, but I can't distinctly remember when...I was flipping through some digital clutter and found these pictures, which triggered my memory.  Check out the views, from the panorama to the sunbeam shining through the apple tree branches.






Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Cedar Swamp Village

Holland has only been a settled city for a little over 170 years. But, it's got a dense, unique history. I took an interest in local history during my college years at Northern Michigan University, and was able to take that interest back home after graduation. Recently, I began researching for this blog, and hanging out at the library, poring through the Local History section. I found an old, forboding looking book, entitled Memorials Of The Grand River Valley, flipped open to a seemingly random page, and read the passage "The Indian village, near the southeastern limits of the city,w as also a prominent landing-place. The log-houses, built by the Indians, were of great service to the newly arrived immigrants; and, as it appears, there never has been any trouble between the Red man and the Dutchman." This piqued my interest, as I live near the southeastern limits of Holland. Was there an Indian village in my own neighborhood that history forgot? Memorials ad...

Merry Christmas from Tulip City!

I don't have a full article this week, but here's a little bit of trivia for you: While Holland is a predominantly Christian Reformed city, it was the early Methodists that sprung the Christmas spirit. While an 1867 Sunday School Christmas Program drew nearly 150 youngsters to Hope Church, it was several generations before the Reformed church allowed even Christmas trees into their sanctuaries, as Christmas trees were seen as Pagan symbols. Early Methodists adopted the 19th Century American spirit, and welcomed things like Christmas trees and even Santa Claus into their sanctuaries. I tried to determine exactly how long "several generations" were using Dr. Swierenga's book (and the sources he cites), but could not ascertain the exact time. It's almost certainly somewhere in the vicinity of 50 years (before the Christian Reformed Churches allowed 'pagan' Christmas symbols), which would put their allowing of such things into the early 20th century, but ...

The Myth Of "Free Beer"

  Free beer, free beer, that's my favorite brand,  sing Da yoopers, if I didn't have to buy it, it's the best beer in the land.   So, too, says Your Favorite Uncle At Thanksgiving.  Warm, flat, funky, it don't matter to me, the greatest beer in this whole world is the one you buy for me. But then, the side comments set in: "Sam Adams?  That tastes like shit." "Founders?  Yeah, I worked there when they were brewing.  The hops smelled like sewage - they smelled like sewage!  I called my guys off because I thought we broke a sewer line!" "Want a Bud?  No?  You brought your own?  You're a beer snob now." "I don't drink that yuppy beer." "I like Busch because Busch Light is too redneck for me" I'd like to posit the idea that Baby Boomers don't really even like beer. By 1910, before Prohibition, there were 1,498 breweries in the United States.  By 1979, that number dwindled to fewer than 50.  While the quantity...