. Cyclopedia of hardy fruits. Fruit; Fruit-culture. 106. Early Moorpark. (XVs) New York. The trees are very productive, but are tender to cold, and the crop ripens un- evenly in some situations. This is a good variety to try in the East because of extreme earliness. Early Moorpark is an old English variety. Tree vigorous, hardy, healthy, productive, with strong, luxuriant shoots. Fruit very early; small, round-oval, with a well-marked or deep suture extending from base to apex; skin lemon-yellow flushed and dotted with bright reddish-orange; very juicy, sweet and rich; of best quality; stone f


. Cyclopedia of hardy fruits. Fruit; Fruit-culture. 106. Early Moorpark. (XVs) New York. The trees are very productive, but are tender to cold, and the crop ripens un- evenly in some situations. This is a good variety to try in the East because of extreme earliness. Early Moorpark is an old English variety. Tree vigorous, hardy, healthy, productive, with strong, luxuriant shoots. Fruit very early; small, round-oval, with a well-marked or deep suture extending from base to apex; skin lemon-yellow flushed and dotted with bright reddish-orange; very juicy, sweet and rich; of best quality; stone free from the flesh, round-oblong, rough ; kernel bitter. GIBB. Gibb is another of the compara- tively worthless Russian sorts, but may be of value in the Middle West. The fruit is some- what larger than that of other Russians, ripens about the latest of the Russians, and is fair in quality. But few nurserymen offer the variety, and it is likely soon to be a fruit of the past. Gibb has been grown for a genera- tion, but when, where, and by whom originated does not appear, although it was evidently named after the great Canadian authority on Russian fruits. Tree large, vigorous, upright, hardy, productive. Leaves very large with a long gland-bearing stem. Fruit ripening -August 1st at Geneva, New York ; small, round ; apex acute; suture well-marked but not deep; skin light yellow, with a trace of color in the cheek to the sun ; flesh yellow, juicy, subacid; rather poor; stone medium to large, free, 107. Hemskirke. (XVa) HEMSKIRKE. Fig. 107. This variety is a strain of Moorpark, which it surpasses in hardi- ness of tree. The tree resembles that of Moor- park in wood and foliage, but is a more regular. 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 Hedrick, U. P. New York, The Macmillan company


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectfruitculture, bookyea