. 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, and a synopsis of the vegetable kingdom. Gardening -- Dictionaries; Plants -- North America encyclopedias. VITIS VITIS 1951 Macoun. to N. Dak., Kans. ami Colo, and south to W. Va., Mo. and commonest Grape in the northern states west of New England, abundant along streams. Variable in the flavor and


. 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, and a synopsis of the vegetable kingdom. Gardening -- Dictionaries; Plants -- North America encyclopedias. VITIS VITIS 1951 Macoun. to N. Dak., Kans. ami Colo, and south to W. Va., Mo. and commonest Grape in the northern states west of New England, abundant along streams. Variable in the flavor and maturity of the fruit. Forms with petioles and under surfaces of lvs. pubescent sometimes occur. Occasionally hybridizes with V. Labrusca eastward, the hy- brid being known by the tomentose young shoots and unfolding leaves, and the darker foli- age, which is marked with rusty tomentum along the veins of the less jagged leaves. Var. precox, Bailey, is the June Grape of Missouri, the little sweet fruits ripening in July. 10. Treleasei, Munson. Plant shrubby and much branched, climbing little, the small and mostly short (generally shorter than the lvs.) ten- drils deciduous the first year unless finding support, in- ternodes short, the dia- phragms twice thicker (about one-sixteenth in.) than in V. vulpina and shal- low-biconcave: stipules less than one-fourth as large as in V. vulpina: lvs. large and green, very broad-ovate or even reniform - ovate (often wider than long thin glabrous and shining on both surfaces, the basal sinus very broad and open and making no distinct an- gle with the petiole, the margin unequally notch- toothed (not jagged as in V. vulpina) and indistinctly 3- lobed, the apex much shorter than in V. vulpina: fertile fls. with very short, recurved stamens, sterile with as- cending stamens: cluster small (2 to 3 in. long): ber- ries ^3 in. or less thick, black with a thin bloom, ripening three weeks later than V. vulpina when grown in the same place, thin-sk


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1906