. Catalogue of the Palm and Citrus Nursery including tropical and semi-tropical fruit trees. Nurseries (Horticulture) California Santa Barbara Catalogs; Tropical plants Catalogs; Fruit trees Seedlings Catalogs. PICHOLINE OLIVE, OLIVES. ITALIAN VARIETIES. I have a few thousand potted plants of the follovFing varieties; cuttings taken from trees imported from Italy by Dr. Gould of Montecito. All are the best varieties of the oil Olive. See report of Prof. B. M. Lelong in the annual issue of the State Board of Horticulture for 1889. Potted Cucco $0 30 Corregiolo 30 Frantoio 30 Morchiaio 30 Morine


. Catalogue of the Palm and Citrus Nursery including tropical and semi-tropical fruit trees. Nurseries (Horticulture) California Santa Barbara Catalogs; Tropical plants Catalogs; Fruit trees Seedlings Catalogs. PICHOLINE OLIVE, OLIVES. ITALIAN VARIETIES. I have a few thousand potted plants of the follovFing varieties; cuttings taken from trees imported from Italy by Dr. Gould of Montecito. All are the best varieties of the oil Olive. See report of Prof. B. M. Lelong in the annual issue of the State Board of Horticulture for 1889. Potted Cucco $0 30 Corregiolo 30 Frantoio 30 Morchiaio 30 Morinello 30 Palazuolo 30 COMMON VARIETIES. Mission. The common variety of California; good for pickling and oil; finely rooted trees, 10 to 35 cents each. Mansanillo. (Queen). The large green Olive of commerce. 35 cents each. Navadillo Blanco. 25 cents each. Picholine. Redding. 3 years, 10 cents each. Rubra. 30 cents each. Nostralis. A variety from the south of France; very productive here; fine for oil and good pickler. 35 cents each. POMOLO. Grape Fruit. Larger than the ~ orange but smaller thai the Shad- dock. II each. ORANGE TREES. Washington. (Riverside Nav- el). This is considered by many the king of oranges; size large, very heavy; rind medium thickness; pulp ten- der and melting; nearly seed- less ; flavor delicious; bears a peculiar umbilical formation on the blossom end, from which it derives its name; tree nearly thornless. Taken from buds, in bearing trees, Riverside. 3 yrs. old, 75 cents to $1 each. Mediterranean Sweet. A favor- ite variety, hardy and a good bearer. Fruit of medium size, tender and sweet; bears early, nearly seedless. 75 cts. each. Indian River. From Florida. A very prolific bearer here; fruit round, skin very thin, juicy and of good flavor. 75 cents each. St. Michaels. Very much like the Mediterranean Sweet, only larger. 75 cents each. Tahiti Seedling. Tree vigorous; bears well, but thorny; the tree vs^ith age attains a large size. 10 to 75 cents each.


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggilbertnurserya, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890