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Apple Hill Farm, Produce SEO Analysis

for applehillfarmnh.com

Apple Hill Farm logo

Page Title

Apple Hill Farm – Come Share A Touch of Country With Us…

This webpage doesn't have a defined page title of an appropriate length.

A webpage title, or title tag, is the text that's displayed on the tab of a browser window and as the headline on a search engine result. It acts as the title for the content of the webpage and should preview and clearly define what the webpage is about.

The ideal title tag is between 60 and 80 characters in length and should contain important, quality keywords relevant to the page.

Page Description

This webpage doesn't have a defined page description of an appropriate length.

A webpage description, or meta description tag, is the text that's displayed under the headline on a search engine result. Like the page title, the description should provide a little more information about what the contents of the webpage is about.

The ideal page description is between 160 and 180 characters in length and should contain similar, supportive text to the title tag.

H1 Header

About Apple Hill FarmOur Farm StoreFarmers’ MarketRetail Stores

This webpage doesn't have 1 and only 1 H1 header on the page.

An H1 header tag is like the main headline for a webpage. Differing from a page title, the header isn't displayed on the browser tab or search engine result, but it's often the first text that a user sees when visiting a webpage, and should clearly introduce the content that it appears before.

Every webpage should have 1 and only 1 H1 header tag per page, and it should include relevant, quality keywords.

Content Length

Word count: 1,035 words, Reading time: 4.1 minutes"Skip to content FacebookInstagram Search for: About UsFarm StorePick ’em YourselfFarmers’ MarketRetail MarketsApple Picking Schedule and Rating Search for: Home Pageadmin2023-11-23T12:21:40+00:00 AnnouncementsThe farm stand is officially closed for the season!!Please see how list below under “retail stores” of where to purchase some of our homemade items year-round. 2023 will undoubtedly go down in our minds as the most difficult year we have faced in over 45 years of farming. An unusually warm winter stretch in January 2023 was followed by a cold arctic blast one night in early February that killed 100% of the peach buds in all of the northeastern United States. Followed by early warm up in the spring, a late May freeze occurred that for us killed every apple blossom. Thankfully the strawberries, raspberries and blueberries were only marginally impacted. We regrouped and made the decision that we would address what was a huge blow to our business by implementing the following plan.We would plant every spare acre to vegetables, open our farm stand as usual and buy in apples and peaches as needed and be forthright and transparent about what the situation was. Then it rained, and kept raining, records for rainfall amounts and number of rainy days were set across New England. Disease control and weed management was a never-ending job in all of those acres of vegetables. But, we had a greater supply of different vegetables than we have ever had in the past. In a strange twist of fate, in a year where cold temps impacted us the most, we picked sweet corn till the end of October when the first killing frost appeared. 10 years ago, we made a conscious decision to change our marketing strategy for wholesale apples, exiting the traditional wholesale apple market. We started marketing bulk apples to other farms that had crop shortages or did not have the variety mix that we had. That plan paid off in spades this year. After the May freeze, a few phone calls to our fellow growers and we were assured a supply of apples. This turned out to be a very satisfying moment in a year that could have beat us down. We got calls from apple growers all over New England asking what they could do to help, offering the excess apples that they might have. We worked with other N.H. growers to coordinate trucking, to bring in peaches from Connecticut, apples from the few orchards that had small crops in New Hampshire, Maine and Massachusetts.We hope we never have another year like this again, but it was amazing to have such a close-knit bunch of farmers who help each other out in situations like this. We shared crops, and shoulders to lean on, when we needed it the most.Equally satisfying was that our retail customers kept coming. We can’t thank them enough for sticking with us in this difficult year.Thanksgiving may end our retail sales for the year but there is still a lot of work on the farm. Equipment needs to be cleaned, serviced and put away, and our wholesale jam, jelly and dry mix business is very busy during the holiday season. By the time Christmas rolls around we can finally have a day off. Then the planning for next year begins. Seed orders, fertilizer orders, planning of planting schedules, advertising, and capitol improvements and the dreaded regulatory report season takes up all of the bad weather days. Pruning begins in early January, and that will take us through April. Before we know it, it is time to plant peas and start all over again.Let us hope 2024 is bountiful.We want to again thank all of our customers for their support this year, and our awesome employees for their dedication and hard work.Happy Holidays – see you in the spring!Chuck and DianeAbout Apple Hill FarmWe believe that Americans have become too far removed from their food supply and are not aware of where their food comes from. We are trying to change that trend.  We welcome you to our farm at any time and encourage you to ask questions about how our crops are produced. Read about our historyOur Pick ’em Yourself Operation In 1995 we established a “Pick ’em Yourself” operation for small fruits and apples. Approximate PYO ScheduleStrawberries: mid-June to early JulyBlueberries: early July to early SeptemberRaspberries: mid-July to early AugustBlack currants: late July to early AugustApples: late August to Mid-OctoberFrom our farm to your tableWe believe that Americans have become too far removed from their food supply and are not aware of where their food comes from. We are trying to change that trend.  We welcome you to our farm at any time and encourage you to ask questions about how our crops are produced.Our Farm StoreIn 1995, we built a large modern farm stand including a bakery where we bake pies and simmer jellies from scratch. The farm stand houses the sales area for the fruits and vegetables, our own homemade apple cider, jams, jellies, baked goods, and many New Hampshire Made products. Come for a visit! We are open 7 days a week, 8:30 am to 5:30 pmJuly through the day before ThanksgivingFarmers’ MarketWe are at the Concord every Saturday from mid-June to October with our in-season fruits and vegetables, and home made jams, jellies and other treats. DONE FOR THE SEASON8:30am to 12:00 Noon.Capitol St. next to the State HouseRetail StoresOur homemade jams, jellies, pancake mixes, crisp toppings, etc. are available through many local stores. You can order online and ship from several listed below.Black Moose Gifts – Windham, NHBonnie Brae Farm – Plymouth, NHCalef’s Country Store – Barrington, NHCaring Gifts – Concord, NHChutters – Littleton, NHFadden’s General Store – N. Woodstock, NHFolsom’s Sugar House – Chester, NHHarman’s Cheese – Sugar Hill, NHBarn Store of New EnglandJust Maple – Tilton, NHJohnson Golden Harvest, Hooksett, NHFox Country Smokehouse, Cantebury, NHOsbornes – Concord, Hooksett, Winnisquam, NHZeb’s General Store -N. Conway, NH Apple Hill Farm 580 Mountain Road, (N.H. Route 132)Concord, NH 03301(603) 224-8862 Hours Our season ends the day before Thanksgiving. Thank you all for a wonderful season! Look forward to a “fruitful” 2024. Find us! Copyright 2012 - 2024 | All Rights Reserved FacebookInstagram Page load link Go to Top"

This webpage contains over 500 words of content.

Because search engines crawl and index content, and the more content that a webpage has the greater potential for the page to rank for multiple keywords, webpages should contain a good amount of content with more than 500 words being a good benchmark for a regular page, and 1,000 words for blog posts.

The content should be rich with quality, original content - not containing "fluff" just to fill up the space. Having more content will also likely help the page to rank better for search queries as well as rank for more search queries.

Image Alternate Text

Images on page: 4, Images with alt text: 0, Percentage: 0%

0% of the images on this webpage contain alternate text description tags.

Alternate text descriptions for images allow visually impaired website visitors to still be able to understand the context of an image. All images on a page should contain a brief and relevant text alternative to what the image displays.

Internal Links

1. https://applehillfarmnh.com/2. https://applehillfarmnh.com/sample-page/3. /#store4. https://applehillfarmnh.com/#pick5. https://applehillfarmnh.com/#market6. https://applehillfarmnh.com/#retail7. https://applehillfarmnh.com/apple-picking-schedule-and-rating/8. https://applehillfarmnh.com/author/admin/9. https://applehillfarmnh.com/sample-page/

This webpage contains at least 1 link to another of the site's pages.

Internal links are links that redirect users to other pages on the same website. It's important that pages contain internal links to send users and search engine crawlers to other pages and content on the same site.

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