View photos of the recent harvest.
Sixty-four-year-old Chuck Asmus is perched high on a ladder, wrestling bright orange clementine oranges from branches heavy with fruit. About a dozen GleanSLO volunteers are at work on the steep hillside, and you can hear the swish of nimble fingers examining, snipping, and dropping the orange orbs into deep canvas bags slung around sweaty shoulders.
While some volunteers prefer to use a tall stick with a basket-like claw on one end to dislodge the highest fruit in the orchard, Asmus prefers the ladder, especially for a view like this. The surrounding Avila hills are blazing green thanks to recent rains; the air is a balmy blanket of herbaceous rosemary and fresh citrus blossom perfume. Below, hundreds of apple trees are blooming with flushed red flowers. Asmus squints into the sun, his arms in perpetual motion.

āIāve been on something like 450-plus gleans in SLO,ā he says, flashing a smile that reveals that this fact surprises even himself. Like everyone else in this orchard, he wasnāt always a gleaner. It all started in 2001, when a longtime volunteer invited Asmus on his first citrus glean in Nipomo.
āHe said, āWe only pick for two hours, and if you want, Iāll give you a ride,āā Asmus says. āI thought to myself, āWhat is this guy trying to sell me?āā
Recently retired and restless, Asmus decided, āwhy not?ā There was no commitment, nothing to sign, no club to join. Gleans are, by their very nature, spontaneous. Someoneās got a backyard lemon tree overflowing with fruit, or a local farmās got a few extra pounds of green beans. Whoever can go pick them, does. And on that day, Asmus decided he could be one of those people.
āThat was it, after that beautiful day picking at Clamshell Ranch,ā Asmus says.
Maybe itās the breathtaking locales (he and his fellow gleaners spoke wistfully of blueberry and avocado gleans in Cambria), or maybe itās the social aspect (gleans can range from meditative to boisterous, depending on the group), but itās the social obligation that tugs hardest at his heart.Ā
This particular gleanāof tangy, concentrated citrus with juice sweeter than candyāis bound for those who truly need it.Ā
The estimated 1,234 pounds of fruit will go to the Food Bank Coalition of SLO County, which feeds hungry families across the Central Coast. And it all happened because one homeowner in the gated neighborhood gave GleanSLO a call.
āYouāre saving something precious,ā Asmus says, dropping a handful of fruit into his bag with a thump. āNature goes through this whole ordeal; to not save this fruit would be a tragedy. You just know itās the right thing to do.ā

How many pounds of fruit are currently wasting away in your own backyard? This is a question GleanSLO Project Manager Joshua Ayers wants to ask us. For the record, he was an editor inspired to work for GleanSLO after an epic arugula glean at Talley Farms in Arroyo Grande two years ago.
āThere truly is so much food waste happening, and at the same time, there are families who donāt have food on a consistent basis. This is an awesome cause, and I get to be outside,ā Ayers says. Like everyone here, heās hard at work while being interviewed. Cardboard boxes are starting to overflow with the bounty, and foreheads are glistening under the sun. Still, you can get a lot done in two hours.
āYou may have 15 people helping pick radishes, and all of a sudden, youāve got half a ton, and you know thatās going to a family that needs it,ā Ayers says. āThatās pretty incredible.ā
Last year, The Food Bank Coalition of SLO County distributed more than 3 million pounds of produce, and about 209,000 pounds of that was picked in backyards and farms across the Central Coast.
A portion of that food was also recovered from other venues such as farmersā markets and school fruit drives, and the rescued produce was distributed through a string of programs hosted by the food bank. These programs include the Childrenās Farmersā Market Program, where kids get their hands in the mix. (Ayers says itās amazing to see youngsters so excited about kale and onions.)
From Ayersā perspective, it isnāt just the number of pounds of food thatās impressive. Itās the mind shift that ordinary people go through when they realize the rich resource thriving in their backyard. These once invisible heroes, many planted as delicious heirloom varieties decades ago, are finally recognized for their nutrition and flavor.
āWe had three gleaners at a backyard harvest for one fruit tree and 700-plus pounds of grapefruit came off of that tree,ā Ayers says. āWhen you give someone a metric like that, they have no idea they had that much to give. Then, theyāre doubly surprised to know that that fruit might be going to children in need, that very day.ā

This is how ordinary, everyday people become something more. They put on their gloves and canvas bags and become gleaners. Asmus just celebrated his 65th birthday. I asked him what a hardcore gleaner does to celebrate. He thought for a moment, the dayās zesty juice lingering on his lips.
āWell,ā Asmus concludes, still picking, āHe sits down and enjoys the fruits of his labor and the company that heās with.ā
Spoken like a true gleaner.Ā
Hayley Thomas is looking into the GleanSLO lifestyle. She can be reached at hthomas@newtimesslo.com.
This article appears in Mar 17-24, 2016.

