At the risk of sounding like a complete crustafarian, please allow me to recount one of the happiest memories of my childhood, some 30 (mumble mumble) years ago.
It's a story of summer, yes, but more specifically the fruit. The fruit! What a joy it was to eat summer fruit back then. I remember places where you could pick berries by the bucket (which quickly broke). There were melons that were red inside. Tomatoes that could actually be turned into pasta sauce. And eating our weight in strawberries as we picked them for $3.50 an hour. It was an orgy of juiciness and gastric distress.
Near us there was a nectarine orchard where you could fill a bucket for $5. I have tried, over this summer, to impart my love of nectarines to my own children and failed miserably. Quite fairly, they have little interest in fruit that is picked when it still has the consistency of concrete, takes weeks to soften, and then tastes like the Generic McPlainwrap of the fruit world. If it ever ripens.
Most of what I have bought has gone from the consistency of a clay pigeon shooting target to frankly rotten without passing through the merest window of eatability.