This year was back to normal, at least for one of the trees. As I indicated last year, my peaches were on dwarf rootstock, which various sources have indicated don't have long lifespans. This was the trees' 16th year in the ground, and the yellow cling continued a steep decline that began a couple of years ago. It only yielded five pounds--which were good and eaten fresh (bug free)--and the tree will be turned into firewood this winter. It is pretty much dead at this point. Alas. The Belle of Georgia produced about 55 pounds, which is somewhat less than the record year. BG had some issues with the harvest, too, which I'll detail another time. But I'll take the 55 pounds and be happy.
I turned the peaches into pie filling mix (at the time of processing, that just means putting five pounds of sliced treated peaches into a bag and freezing), peach preserves (made in a fashion similar to the pear preserves described recently), peach butter, and I also dehydrated some.

I have also canned peaches--as in sliced and put into syrup--but that is probably my least favorite way of preserving them. They are okay that way, but it is much less work to dehydrate.
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