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Orchard manager Joe Pappas, left, with owners Emily Melchoir and Calvin Rodman. The couple bought the established orchard three years to preserve its agricultural legacy.
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The kitchen at Sandisfield Orchard started churning out apple cider doughnuts Labor Day weekend.
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The barn restoration is one of the latest projects to rejuvenate the orchard.

Sandisfield Orchard Preparing for Apple Season

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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Sandisfield Orchard offers a dozen types of apples for the picking.
SANDISFIELD, Mass. — Sandisfield Orchard is preparing for the apple-picking season, while working on expansions to support the farm for years to come.
 
Owners Emily Melchoir and her husband, Calvin Rodman, have worked for the past three years to build up the orchard and its offerings. 
 
Even though the couple didn't have a background in farming, they leaped to buy the New Hartford Road property because they wanted it to stay a farm and not run the risk of someone developing the land.
 
Since taking on the adventure with her husband and kids, Melchoir said the community has been a big help.
 
"It's been great. It's been a lot of fun. We've had a lot of support from the local community and from the kind of broader, I don't know, agricultural community, like regionally as well, which has been great," she said. "I think people are really supportive of wanting to see farms get to continue on, and so that's been a lot of fun."
 
They have planted more apple trees, including heritage varieties, along with peaches and pears that will be ready to pick in a few years. The 150-acre orchard has around 2,000 trees and they are still planting.
 
"We have 12 mature varieties that we'll have apples for sale from this fall, but we've planted another dozen varieties and peaches and pears that'll be ready in a couple of years. So we've been investing a lot in, you know, in trying to expand the offerings and the things," Melchoir said.
 
They recently transformed the front of the main house into a cafe, offering bucolic views of the orchard and the mountains. 
 
"We've been gradually increasing our offerings. So we kind of started small with coffee and pastries, and we've been adding more pastries and cookies and some savory things, and then we'll have sandwiches in like two weeks," Melchoir said. "And then the hope is that we can continue to have the cafe open even post-apple season."
 
They hope to make the orchard a community destination. 
 
"We want people to feel like they can come and hang out here. And then we also hope that outside of the main apple season, the people will come here for the cafe and stuff like that, and view it as a destination for coffee, pastry, sandwiches, those sorts of things," she said.
 
William and Barbara Riiska had turned the former family dairy farm into Riiska Brook Orchard, planting the first apple trees around 35 years ago. They sold 11 varieties of apples and had pick-your-own for apples and blueberries for decades. 
 
Melchoir and Rodman live down the road and heard the Riiskas were looking to sell. They wanted to keep the acreage from being a development and preserve the farming aspect here in the county.
 
"We had heard locally that the owners were going to look to sell the orchard, and we bought it because we wanted it to stay a farm," Melchoir said.
 
Besides bringing in more fruit choices, they are currently working to restore the barn, and plan to open a cidery next year. They also installed an industrial kitchen in the main house, where they make their own treats and their fall staple — apple cider doughnuts.
 
The orchard is located at 101 New Hartford Road and apple picking season starts this weekend. The cafe is open Friday through Sunday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Follow their Facebook page for updates. 

Tags: agriculture,   harvest,   orchard,   

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First Eagle Mill Units in Lee to Open in Springtime

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Eagle Mills developer Jeffrey Cohen updates the Lee Chamber of Commerce as the project's phases, and the amount of heavy lifting to get it to this point. 

LEE, Mass. — More than 50 affordable units are expected to come online at the Eagle Mill this spring.

This is the first of several planned development phases at the former paper mill that dates back to the early 1800s, totaling more than 200 units. The Lee Chamber of Commerce hosted an information session on the project during its Business Breakfast last Wednesday. 

"We are here because we have a really big project that's happened for a very long time here in Lee, that, for myself, has provided a real sense of hope, and has has really defined this community as one of the few in the Berkshires that's really looking forward, as opposed to just being sort of stuck in the past," Chamber member Erik Williams said. 

The estimated $60 million development broke ground in 2021 after nearly a decade of planning and permitting. Hundreds of workers once filed into the 8-acre complex, producing up to 165 tons of paper a week. The last mill on the property closed in 2008.


Hearthway is accepting applications for 56 affordable apartments called "The Lofts at Eagle Mill" with expected occupancy in May. The housing nonprofit was also approved for 45 additional units of new construction on the site. 

Jeffrey Cohen of Eagle Mill Redevelopment LLC said the project dates back to 2012, when a purchase contract was signed for the West Center Street property. The developers didn't have to close on the property until renovation plans were approved in 2017, and the mill was sold for $700,000. 

It seemed like a great deal for the structure and eight acres on the Housatonic River, Cohen explained, but he wasn't aware of the complex pre-development costs, state, and local approvals it would entail.  Seven individually owned homes adjacent to the property were also acquired and demolished for parking and site access. 

"If I knew today what I knew then, I'm not sure we'd be sitting here," he said, joining the breakfast remotely over Zoom. 

Cohen praised the town's government, explaining that the redesigns and critiques "Could not have been done in a friendlier way, in a more helpful way," and the two Massachusetts governors serving during the project's tenure. The Eagle Mill redevelopment is supported by state and federal grants, as well as low-income housing tax credits. 

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