. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches. Gardening. COLORADO which are in great part utilized as hay ranches and for stock ranges. The following figures regarding acreage are from the report of the state engineer for the year 1890. The total is given as approximately 66,560,000 acres. East of the continental divide lie 40,800,000 acres, and on the west 25,760,00


. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches. Gardening. COLORADO which are in great part utilized as hay ranches and for stock ranges. The following figures regarding acreage are from the report of the state engineer for the year 1890. The total is given as approximately 66,560,000 acres. East of the continental divide lie 40,800,000 acres, and on the west 25,760,000 acres. Of the area east of the divide, one-third, or 10,200,000 acres, lies within tue mountains and the remainder, 30,000,000 acres, con- sists of plain and valley lands. On the western slope the proportion of mountain and plain is reversed, there being 16,360,000 acres within the mountains and about 9,400,000 acres of plain and â valley lands. For the western slope the rainfall is given as 33 inches for the mountains and for the plains and valleys, and for the eastern slope as 30 inches for the mountains and 15 inches for the plains. The tillable lands of the state are in the main out- side the mountains, and the average annual rainfall on these lauds is near 13 Inches for the whol This rainfall comes mainly in the months of April, May [_ and June, the precipitation ; '-v_ for the other months being . y-" ] ^ usually very small. It fol- ⢠~^ ^ I lows,fromthesmallrainfall, |_, that crops can only be sue- j cessfully grown by irriga- ^ j^-alc , tion, and it is this idea that â / or.,~.iLU I has dominated the agricul- j i' - - - - j ture and horticulture of the ^ â¢' â^ ââ COLORADO 355 torn lands along Clear creek, between Denver and Golden, planted a number of apple trees which he hauled in a wagon from Iowa City, la. In the fall of the same year, Messrs. Perrin and Wolff, of Denver, hauled a load of trees from Des Moines, la., and such as sur- vived the j


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