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CORK HARVEST
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12:33 PM (7 hours ago)
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Did you ever wonder where cork comes from? Interesting...
AN EDUCATION IN CORK
Sure looks like this would kill the trees but apparently not.

Have you ever wondered where that cork in your bottle of wine comes from?
The answer is most likely to be Spain or Portugal,
where over half of the world’s cork is harvested.

In fact it is the “National Tree” of Portugal.

However, unlike other forms of forestry,
the production of cork
never involves the death of a tree.

Instead, they are gently stripped, leaving a strange but fascinating
landscape of denuded trunks.

All of this takes some time.
Cork trees can live to over 200 hundred years
but are not considered ready for their cork to
be removed until they are at least 25 years old.
Even then, the first two harvests do not produce cork of the highest quality.
It isn’t until the trees are in their forties that they produce premium cork.


Once the trees have reached the maturity necessary to produce high quality cork
then they will be harvested only every nine years.

A tree, in its lifetime, can be harvested (the process is known as extraction) about fifteen times.

Little wonder then, that in Portugal and Spain the propagation of the trees
and the production of cork has become an inter-generational industry,
with farmers still producing a crop from trees planted by their great-great grandfathers.

The
cork must, however, be extracted from the trees without causing any
lasting harm to them – otherwise, 9 years later they will be useless.

Extraction takes place in the summer when the tree is least susceptible to damage.

The
poor cork which is produced as a result of the first two harvests is
known as male cork: later extractions provide what is known as gentle
cork which is what you will screw out of a wine bottle, the contents of
which it helps to flavour.
The extractors must be skilled at their job. They make two cuts to the tree.
The
first is horizontal and is cut around the tree. This is known as the
necklace and the incision is made at a height around three times the
circumference of the tree.
Then a series of vertical cuts are made which are called openings or rulers.
This is the point at which the extractors must use the most strength
but at the same time be at their most gentle. They push the handle of the axe in to the rulers and pry the cork away.

If
the cuts are too deep or impatiently done then there is a risk that the
phellogen of the tree will be damaged. This is the cell layer which is
responsible for the development and growth of the periderm of the tree –
its bark in other words.

Damage
this and the tree will produce poor or no cork in the future: it may
even die. So strength and gentleness must be used in equal measure
during the extraction.

Once the cork is extracted it is stacked in layers and left to dry out. Once that has taken place it is taken to be processed.

The technique used leaves the trees alive and the environment intact
– cork production is said to one of the most eco-friendly and recyclable harvests on the planet.

Not
only is cork easy to recycle. The trees prevent the local environment
from becoming arid and so actively help to maintain rare ecosystems.

Not
only that, but the cork forests of the Iberian Peninsula are home to a
number of endangered species which would find it much harder to thrive
without the presence of the cork oak forests.


Although
60% of the cork extracted is still used for bottle stoppers (despite
the recent predilection for using alternatives) cork is an essential
component of a number of other things too.

If
you are a fan of badminton, then without cork you would no longer be
able to play – it is a vital component in the manufacture of
shuttlecocks. More sports rely on it too – the centres of baseball and
cricket bats are made of cork.
Cork
is also a great material to use for insulation. It is non-allergenic
and easy-to-handle and if it does catch fire, its fumes are not toxic
like man-made insulation materials.

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