. Bulletin. 1901-13. Agriculture; Agriculture. Fig. 7.—Blueberry seedling in peat mixture Fig. 8.—Blueberry seedling in peat mixture limed. (One-half natural size.) unlimed. (One-half natural size.) experiment was interrupted, however, and its average results vitiated because the roots of some of the limed plants found their way through the holes in the bottom of the pots and obtained nourishment from the unlimed material in which the pots were plunged. Such plants made nearly as good growth as the unlimed plants. On November 27, 1909, there remained only one of the limed plants whose roots we


. Bulletin. 1901-13. Agriculture; Agriculture. Fig. 7.—Blueberry seedling in peat mixture Fig. 8.—Blueberry seedling in peat mixture limed. (One-half natural size.) unlimed. (One-half natural size.) experiment was interrupted, however, and its average results vitiated because the roots of some of the limed plants found their way through the holes in the bottom of the pots and obtained nourishment from the unlimed material in which the pots were plunged. Such plants made nearly as good growth as the unlimed plants. On November 27, 1909, there remained only one of the limed plants whose roots were all inside the pot. This plant was feeble and small, its stem being only 2£ inches high. Its inferiority to the unlimed plants was almost as conspicuous as that of the garden-soil plants described on page IT and illustrated in figure 5. 193. 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 United States. Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. Washington Govt. Print. Off


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