Text book for Reading Course in Irrigation Practice

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Text book for Reading Course in Irrigation Practice
Elwood Mead
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Hoops, Wrights, Santa Clara County: I have generally improved the quality of my fruit by irrigation, and therefore get better prices from fruit shippers.
J. V. Webster, Creston, San Luis Obispo County: My experience is that irrigated fruits do not ship so well as nonirrigated, decaying and fading in color much more rapidly.
Dr. W. N. Sherman, Fresno, Fresno County; For eighteen years we have obtained the highest prices on table grapes of any shipped from thii^ State. In 1902 our table grapes ne
...tted us |600 per acre. The fruit is grown with irrigation.
J. S. McCormick, Fresno: We irrigate everything. We sell to shippers to ship the fruit to the east, and hear no complaint about its not keeping.
George C. Roeding, Fresno: Shippers take irrigated fruits as readily as nonirri- gated, and they carry fully as well.
Charles Downing, Armona, Kings County: My pears, grown on trees subirrigated by seepage from main canals, have always brought top prices in New York and Chicago. I have shipped peaches from trees similarly irrigated, but while some have brought good prices the result as a whole has not been satisfactory, the claim being made by consignees in many instances that the peaches from the district do not carry as well as those from the mountain districts.


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