argia.eus
INPRIMATU
Immortal apples
  • They say the apple kicked us out of paradise, but it has given us the cider, another paradise. Thinking about it, Joy Doumis and Jeremy Hammond embarked on their earthly project: Malus Immortalis. “Malus” is the scientific name of apples, and the word “immortalis” is immortal. But what's called that double name? The initiative has been carried out in Brooklyn: making cider with the fruits of apples found in an old abandoned cemetery. The cemetery of 1838 is called Green-Wood, and it's from that time that they were built as parks. It's impressive, it has nearly 700 goals.
Jakoba Errekondo 2017ko abuztuaren 28a
Joy Doumis eta Jeremy Hammondek Brooklyneko Green-Wood hilerrian 
hazitako sagarrekin egiten dute sagardoa. (Arg.: Christian Johnston)

During a walk they found a sweet apple, of those that feel like throwing it through their mouths before they bite, that is, making cider. There began her love for apples and cider.

It is estimated that there are more than 150 varieties or varieties of apples. And they've started planting new ones, as well as many apples pots or sagarminas that already exist. An apple tree that constantly reinvents and renews between the mausoleums and statues that have been built in two centuries! Among the life stories of thousands of people...

Mixing the variants in one form or another, they have made all kinds of ciders and made them mature in the catacombs of the cemetery. In the hope that they will take advantage of the many initiatives carried out in Auzolan... One of them is called “Paradisus.” He's also a beekeeper who has his flies in the cemetery for these apples to give their flowers. Honey is called “Sweet from here to back.”

These ciders are only drunk in the cemetery. Being foamy, when you open the bottles, a jet falls to the ground. What's happened about the roots of apples. As here, the dregs that remain at the bottom of the glass when it has been drunk is how it returns to earth.

I've always said, I want to see my body under a cider apples.