. Catalogue of fruit trees, evergreens, roses, etc. Nurseries (Horticulture) Catalogs; Nurseries (Horticulture) Georgia; Flowers Catalogs; Shrubs Catalogs; Trees Catalogs; Fruit trees Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs. RASPBERRIES, CULTURE—Upright Growing Va- rieties or Red—The toil should be rich and well worked. For Field Cull lire—Plant in rows 6 feet apart and 3 feet in the the row, or 4 feet apart each way. In July, after the crop is har- vested, remove all ihe canes which have pro- duced fruit, and cut back the new canes to 2 feet; this will cause them to branch and be- come self-sup


. Catalogue of fruit trees, evergreens, roses, etc. Nurseries (Horticulture) Catalogs; Nurseries (Horticulture) Georgia; Flowers Catalogs; Shrubs Catalogs; Trees Catalogs; Fruit trees Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs. RASPBERRIES, CULTURE—Upright Growing Va- rieties or Red—The toil should be rich and well worked. For Field Cull lire—Plant in rows 6 feet apart and 3 feet in the the row, or 4 feet apart each way. In July, after the crop is har- vested, remove all ihe canes which have pro- duced fruit, and cut back the new canes to 2 feet; this will cause them to branch and be- come self-supporting. During winter give a liberal manuring, and keep the ground well worked. For Caps—Plant further apart in the row, as they propagate from the tips of the canes, bent down. They should not be pruned until winter, and cut at the bend of the cane. The old canes must be entirely remored, as in the red varieties. For Garden Culture—Plant the red varieties 3 feet apart and the caps 6 feet, and train to stakes. The summer pruning of the red varieties may be done if stakes are not used; otherwise omitted. Large yield \ of fruit can be expected only if plants are well manured; and thoroughly cultivated. Cotton seed compost, cot- ton seed meal, or pure ground bone art; all desirable fertilizers, and should be applied during winter or early spring. Cuthbert—After several years' trial, this proves perhaps the best and most reliable of all the red fruited varieties. Its introduction has made Raspberry GREGG. culture quite profitable in sections of the Southern States where this product had been unreliable. Fruit red, large, of excellent quality; yield very prolific; ripens middle of May, and continues for several weeks. Price, 50 cents per 10; $3 "per 100; §15 per 1,000. Plants cannot be supplied before beginning of November. f£Jreg-g—The largest and best of all the Black Cans that we have tried. Fruit firm, dark purple, with heavy bloom; ripens a week before the


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookyear1892