Not long ago, on a visit to Petaluma (for what reason I no longer remember) I stopped into the large heirloom seed store there and saw on the front counter several copies of Andrew Moore's book Paw Paw: In Search of America's Forgotten Fruit (Chelsea Green Publishing, 2015). Having lived for some time in southwestern Ohio (in Dayton between the ages of 10 and 17), smack in the middle of the Paw Paw's native range, I have tasted a Paw Paw, although only once. I don't recall where the fruit I ate came from, but I vividly remember how pleasantly surprised I was by its exotic taste and its large, shiny, black seeds. That would have been sometime around 1976 or so. Later, as a student of Japanese at Ohio State University, I remember thinking of that one Paw Paw again when I came upon a Paw Paw tree on the OSU campus six or seven years later. Since then, I have off and on wondered about the Paw Paw. So, seeing this book in Petaluma, I purchased a copy, which I have just finished reading. The book is written in the first person and reads rather like a travelogue as the author criss-crosses the plant's range to talk with growers and enthusiasts and people who, like me, remember the Paw Paw but have lost touch with it, chronicling the fruit's history and its slow revival.
It's been 10 years since Moore's book was released. A few weeks ago I was able to go online and easily order a pair of Paw Paw trees to try in my California garden – cultivars that appear to have been just coming into the market at the time of the book's publication. That is evidence that Paw Paw development has continued and that this fruit, once common throughout its range, is making something of a comeback. I don't know how these trees native to the Midwestern US states will do in the hotter, drier climate here, but I'll do my best to nurture them. The trees arrived a few days ago. I planted them shortly afterward. I've enclosed them in cages to keep marauding deer away and given them some protection from the mid-day sun. The plants themselves are barely visible, but they're there.
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