Fruit Farming for Profit Rev to 1911 a Practical Treatise With Detailed I

Cover Fruit Farming for Profit Rev to 1911 a Practical Treatise With Detailed I
Fruit Farming for Profit Rev to 1911 a Practical Treatise With Detailed I
George Bunyard
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Currants and Gooseberries are so much alike in growth, that in purchasing it is better to specify a minimum number of shoots, or buy by sample at per 100, and ask the seller to have them tied up in small bundles (not too many in one). Raspberries are none the worse if only two feet high ; fibrous roots being the great desideratum.
120 FRUIT FARMING TRUE TO KIND. A word as to getting trees true to name : Nurserymen are but mortal, and when it is considered that many hundreds of varieties are gro
...wn, the wonder is that so few mistakes occur. If, when you go into a Nursery, you see the tallies or number pegs systematically arranged, you may be sure that the proprietors and foremen are careful people. Where the pegs are partly rotten, tumbled down, or illegible (which happens in soils that do not grow trees freely, and where they remain a long time on the ground], it would be a better plan to mark your trees while the leaf is on. Mistakes rarely occur in market trees, because they are grown in large quarters of a kind, but in garden sorts, where perhaps the fore- man has not opportunities of selecting grafts, mistakes may be innocently propagated.

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