. Dreer's mid-summer catalogue 1910. Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Fruit Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Nurseries (Horticulture) Catalogs; Gardening Equipment and supplies Catalogs. PLANTED TOO DEEP Perfect and Imperfect or Pistillate Flowers Varieties marked pistillate have imperfect blos- soms. They include many of the most prolific and desir- able kinds. It is only necessary to plant perfect-flowered varieties near them, in the proportion of one to four ; either one plant to four in the row, or one row of perfect- tlowering plants to four rows of pistillate plants. Pot-Grown versus La


. Dreer's mid-summer catalogue 1910. Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Fruit Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Nurseries (Horticulture) Catalogs; Gardening Equipment and supplies Catalogs. PLANTED TOO DEEP Perfect and Imperfect or Pistillate Flowers Varieties marked pistillate have imperfect blos- soms. They include many of the most prolific and desir- able kinds. It is only necessary to plant perfect-flowered varieties near them, in the proportion of one to four ; either one plant to four in the row, or one row of perfect- tlowering plants to four rows of pistillate plants. Pot-Grown versus Layer Plants Potted plants may appear expensive, yet when the labor necessary to grow them into proper condition and the time saved in the result of the crop are considered, they will be found much cheaper than ordinary layer plants. They may be planted after a crop of early sum- mer vegetables has been harvested, and a crop of fruit secured in eight to ten months after planting. Layer Plants A full list of layer plants will be given in our Autumn Cata- logue, which we issue in September. They are not so desirable as pot-grown plants, and will not produce as large a crop of fruit next spring ; but they are cheaper and more available for extensive plant- ing. Under proper autumn treatment they produce quite satisfactory results. A " layer'' strawberry plant is one that has taken root by its own effort, whereas a " pot-grown'' plant, having all the fine fibrous roots confined in the pot, is not checked in growth by transplanting. (0. 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 Henry A. Dreer (Firm); Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection. Philadelphia, Pa. : Henry A. Dreer


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1910