The Custard Apple in Queensland With Notes On Its History And Cultivation

Cover The Custard Apple in Queensland With Notes On Its History And Cultivation
The Custard Apple in Queensland With Notes On Its History And Cultivation
Queensland Dept of Agriculture And Stock
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-1. Reticulata. Growing at Bowen Park in 1866. Thirty-four Custard Apples were distributed from the Brisbane Botanic Gardens in 1862, but the species are not recorded. Five hundred and fifty-seven bushels of Custard Apples were produced from 13 acres in 1908.
" Anona- squamosa. Plants were sent to M. C. O'Connell, Port Curtis, and to a gardener in Brisbane in 1854 from the Sydney Botanic Gardens. Growing in Captain Wickham's garden at Xewstead in 1856 and in the Brisbane Botanic Gardens in 1861
.... " There is a record in the report of the Acclimatisation Society for 1885 of Anona pahistris (Syn. A. Ylabra L. ) the alligator apple, having fruited in the society 's gardens in that year. The Custard Apple appears to have been little noticed in Queensland until the late Mr. L. G. Corrie brought into prominence a very fine variety (Pink's Mammoth) found in a private garden near Brisbane. The years 1879 to 1885 hold the most important period in the history of the Custard Apple in Queens- land.

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