. 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; Horticulture; Horticulture; Horticulture. RUBUS 1585 Section 5. Sand Blackberries, with and very thorny growths, small \ white-tomentose beneath. 28. cuneiidlins, Pursh (ij. aculitls- .limMS, Keasoner). Sand Blackberry. Pig. 239, Vol. I. Plant stiff and thorny, usually not over 3-4 ft. tall, the prickles


. 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; Horticulture; Horticulture; Horticulture. RUBUS 1585 Section 5. Sand Blackberries, with and very thorny growths, small \ white-tomentose beneath. 28. cuneiidlins, Pursh (ij. aculitls- .limMS, Keasoner). Sand Blackberry. Pig. 239, Vol. I. Plant stiff and thorny, usually not over 3-4 ft. tall, the prickles many, booked, and very strong, the young growths whi Ifts on bearing canes mostly small and thick, wedge-oblong to wedge-obovate, obtuse or nearly so, densely white- tomentose be- neath, the mar-. larger, often ovate-pointed or elliptic: 4-10- fld., short, more or less leafy I thorny, the glob- ular and pubescent: fr. medium in size, firm, often sweet and good. Dry fields, Connecticut to the Gulf, and the common Blackberry â places. âIn cultiva- tion this seems to be repre- sented by the viciously thorny Topsy or Tree Black- berry, although the charac- teristic white t omentum largely disappears under domestication. Were it not for this tomentum, the spe- would be difficult to distinguish from B. flori- dus. Section 6. Swamp Blackberries, uith canes and reddish fruits. 29. setdsus, Bigel. (B. hispidus, vai Peck). Mostly erect, sometimes ascendii slender canes clothed with many weak mostl-y recuived prickles and sometimes conspicuously hispid also, the prickles generally extending to the petioles and inflor- escence: Ifts. oblanceolate to ovate, pointed or aeumi nate, very strong-toothed: fr small, with few drupelets, reddish black. Swamps, Quebec to Pa âNot known to be in the trade, but inserted here because it is confused with a. hispidus and other species. AA. Dewberries: Plant trailing or decumbent. Group 1. Swamp Dewberries, ivith weak bristly stems


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