The American Fruit Garden Companion: Being a Practical Treatise On the ...

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The American Fruit Garden Companion: Being a Practical Treatise On the ...
Edward Sayers
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I do not recollect of seeing the plum bear so free and thrive so well at any place as at Albany, New York, which place appears to be quite congenial to this fruit ; the gages, magnum bonum, and all the finer varieties, are found there in abundance. But I PROIT GARDEN AUD ORCHARD. 81 cannot say that the flavor was so rich as might be expected, which I think is partly owing to the trees being heavily loaded every other year.
To give any precise rule for the thinning of fruit would far exceed my p
...rescribed limits, and indeed it would be rather a difficult task ; therefore I shall endeavor to bit upon some medium which shall be satisfactory and clear.
Vegetables and trees, like animals, hare their different stages of life, as youth, maturity, old age, and decay ; this must be considered in thinning of fruit. Young trees will be found most capable of maturing a heavy crop of fruit ; and geoeriilly it is seen that they have the most moderate produce.
Old trees, on the contrary, are the least capable of maturing a heavy crop, which they mostly bear : — hence it would appear that young trees do not re- quire so much thinning as those in years : but in most cases they should be attended to.


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