Jean Baptiste Christophore Fusée Aublet (November 4, 1720 – May 6, 1778) was a French pharmacist, botanist and explorer.
Born in Salon-de-Provence, he joined the French East India Company and in 1752 was sent to Mauritius (then known as l'Île de France) to establish a pharmacy and a botanical garden. He worked there for nine years. During this time he was accused of having destroyed plants from the collection of Pierre Poivre, being jealous of the latter's success.
In 1762 he was sent to Cayenne in French Guiana, where he assembled a vast herbarium which allowed him to prepare his Histoire des plantes de la Guiane françoise, published in 1775 and including almost 400 copperplate engravings.
When Fusée Aublet died at Paris in 1778, he left his herbarium to Jean-Jacques Rousseau, though the latter possessed it for only two months before he too died. It was eventually acquired by the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle in 1953.
One fine morning I got tired of hanging around
Took a footpath forty miles from town
and stopped to look around
Found a cabin with six dounble bunks
Just some flashlights and some lockers full of junk
Words of love scrawled on the wall
Lead me back through golden Falls
and happy days I spent at Apple Hill
I remember still the fun we had
at Apple Hill
Write your boyfriend's name upon the wall
We're gonna go swimmin' and we
won't wear clothes at all
Oh so many memeories
These few moments set them free
To spend some time with me
at Apple Hill
I remember still the fun we had
at Apple Hill
Happiness was summer days
and happiness was Apple Hill
Honeybees and balin' hay
Let your mind drift, if you will
back to happy days at Apple Hill