. 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. Gardening. 1584 RUBUS RUBUS Var. sativus, Bailey (72. satlvus, Brainerd). Fig. 2207; also Fig. 237, Vol. I. Generally lower and the canes more erect: Ifts. broader (or at least shorter) and less prominently pointed: shorter (usually from the elongation of the lower pedicels or the upper ones remaining short):
. 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. Gardening. 1584 RUBUS RUBUS Var. sativus, Bailey (72. satlvus, Brainerd). Fig. 2207; also Fig. 237, Vol. I. Generally lower and the canes more erect: Ifts. broader (or at least shorter) and less prominently pointed: shorter (usually from the elongation of the lower pedicels or the upper ones remaining short): fr. rounder, and the drupelets usually relatively larger and juicier. Dry, open 2203. Rubus laciniatus (X M). No. 20. — Distinct in its extreme forms, but running into the species by all manner of intermediate gradations. From this plant the common "Short-cluster Blackberries" of the garden appear to be derived, as Snyder, Kittatinny, Erie, etc. 23. Allegheni6nsis, Porter {B. vlUdsiis, var. nion- iclnits and H. montdnus. Porter, not Wirtg.). Very like R. nigrohaccus, and perhaps only a mountain state of a cosmopolitan type: plant smaller, usually less prickly: branches and leaf-stalks usually reddish, and all 3'^oung growths very glandular-pubescent: Ivs. mostly smaller, very long-pointed, closer-toothed: usually smaller: fr. small, long and narrow, tapering towards the top, the drupelets many and small, not very juicy but of good flavor. In mountains and highlands. Ontario to Virginia.— Common on the higher elevations, afford- ing much edible fruit. In its typical form, as seen in the wild, it is very distinct from R. nigrobaccus, par- ticularly in its fruit. 24. heterophyllus, Willd. Fig. 238, Vol. I. R. nigro- hacetisxR. villosns, in many forms both wild and culti- vated. In cultivation this hybrid class is represented by the "Loose-cluster Blackberries," as Wilson, Wilson Jr., and Rathbun. The plants are usually half-erect, tho
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