. Amateur fruit growing. A practical guide to the growing of fruit for home use and the market. Written with special reference to colder climates. Fruit-culture. of the stone. This causes the fruit to become diseaseu and it falls prematurely to the ground. Within the plum the growth of the iarva is completed. It then goes into the ground and transforms to the beetle and soon goes to the surface and escapes. Memedy.—When the curculio gets alarmed it draws itself to- gether and falls to the ground. Advantages are taken of this peculiarity to catch and destroy it. A sheet is spread under the tree


. Amateur fruit growing. A practical guide to the growing of fruit for home use and the market. Written with special reference to colder climates. Fruit-culture. of the stone. This causes the fruit to become diseaseu and it falls prematurely to the ground. Within the plum the growth of the iarva is completed. It then goes into the ground and transforms to the beetle and soon goes to the surface and escapes. Memedy.—When the curculio gets alarmed it draws itself to- gether and falls to the ground. Advantages are taken of this peculiarity to catch and destroy it. A sheet is spread under the trees and the tree and its branches are suddenly jarred, when the beetles, which fail on the sheet, may be gathered up and destroyed. As it is im- portant to catch as many beetles as possible before any mischief has been done, jar- ring should begin while the tree is in blossom, and be con- tinued daily morning and evening, if the insects are abundant, for three or four weeks, or until they become very scarce. Another remedy which is less laborious and has been found very effectual is to spray the plums as soon as the fruit is formed with Paris green in the proportion of one pound to two hundred gallons of water, and repeating the application at intervals of a week or ten days until the curculios disappear. If the weather is very showery three sprayings may be necessary, but gen- erally two is sufficient. It will be found that where heos with their broods of chickens are inclosed with- in the plum orchard that they will devour a large number of the larva of the curculio. If hogs are kept in the same inclosure as the plum trees they will pick up the fallen fruit and so destroy a great Fig. 77.—a, Part nfplum shoioing egg-pnnc- many of the larva. tare, and locatinii of egg, froin : n r\ TVi b,.section through egg-puncture, showing Ir'LTTM LtOUGER. ine egg. plum gouger is a snout- beetle somewhat resembling the curculio, but readily distinguished from it by a little ca


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectfruitculture, bookyea