. Dwarf fruit trees;. Fruit. DWARF APPLES 65 lost. The upright cordon can be bent into the form of an arch in order to make dehghtful arbors along the walks. The illustration, Fig. 2, shows a good ex- ample of this sort. Nearly all varieties of apples—indeed all as far as I know—succeed in this form. The trees are not. FIG. 25—DWARF APPLES ON PROF. L. H. BAILEYS FARM, NEW YORK very long-lived, however. That is they cannot be maintained in good presentable form and prolific bear- ing indefinitely, because it is difficult to reproduce the fruit spurs on the lower part of the stem. Never- theless


. Dwarf fruit trees;. Fruit. DWARF APPLES 65 lost. The upright cordon can be bent into the form of an arch in order to make dehghtful arbors along the walks. The illustration, Fig. 2, shows a good ex- ample of this sort. Nearly all varieties of apples—indeed all as far as I know—succeed in this form. The trees are not. FIG. 25—DWARF APPLES ON PROF. L. H. BAILEYS FARM, NEW YORK very long-lived, however. That is they cannot be maintained in good presentable form and prolific bear- ing indefinitely, because it is difficult to reproduce the fruit spurs on the lower part of the stem. Never- theless the trees are inexpensive and can be cheaply replaced. As they come into bearing the first or second year after planting, this task of replacing worn-. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Waugh, F. A. (Frank Albert), 1869-1943. New York, O. Judd company


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Keywords: ., bookauthorwaughfaf, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookyear1906