. Plant propagation; greenhouse and nursery practice. cts claimed the following are quoted: Fruit of grafted vinesis larger, has bigger seeds, thinner skin, berries are less numerous,juice is more copious, is usually both more acid and sugary, isless rich in phosphate, more highly charged with nitrogenous mat-ters, has little tannin, less color and the color is less stable; vinesare more fruitful; fruit ma-tures earlier. These differ-ences varj- in different an experiment with grapestock for American grapescarried on for eleven yearsat the New York station ma-terial differences were f


. Plant propagation; greenhouse and nursery practice. cts claimed the following are quoted: Fruit of grafted vinesis larger, has bigger seeds, thinner skin, berries are less numerous,juice is more copious, is usually both more acid and sugary, isless rich in phosphate, more highly charged with nitrogenous mat-ters, has little tannin, less color and the color is less stable; vinesare more fruitful; fruit ma-tures earlier. These differ-ences varj- in different an experiment with grapestock for American grapescarried on for eleven yearsat the New York station ma-terial differences were foundbetween grafted and un-grafted vines, all included inthe above summary. 227. Influence of cion onstock—Cion in its turn hasa decided influence on example, the form ofroots is much changed by thecion. Thus, in starting ap-ples in a nursery we budon seedlings which unbuddedwould ha\e root systemsmuch the same, but at dig-ging time the roots of the -j-j^g knife cuts the roots at 12 to 18 inchesvarious \arieties are as below the FIG. 152—NURSERY TREE DIGGER \ 180 PLANT IKOPAGATION


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Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectplantpropagation