File:Planting guide (16387288402).jpg

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Our Trees Are Triple Inspected For Your Protection
REDHAVEN
REDHAVEN (4c) Hardly enough can be said about
this fine peach, the standard of all early peaches. It
colors a beautiful red and golden yellow. The skin is
smooth, almost fuzzless, resembling J. H. Hale. Flesh is
very firm, smooth textured, and of good flavor. Fruits
are medium sized, round, uniform, and of excellent ap-
pearance. Redhaven is one of our most versatile
varieties. It is good for freezing, canning, local and
distant markets. Proper thinning will allow the vigorous
and very productive trees to be some of your most
profitable ones. Wood and buds of Redhaven are
hardy and disease resistant.
GOLDENRED (4d) A yellow freestone of high quahty
and good color, ripening with Redhaven. It is smooth,
round, and firmer than Redhaven. Flesh is lemon-yellow,
fine textured, of .)leasing taste, with some red about the
pit. Fruit ripens evenly, with skin color developing early
to permit picking while still firm. This fine new peach
was introduced to replace Redhaven in trouble areas.
Try some. . . .
REGINA (4e) Ripens with Redhaven. Fruit is medi-
um sized, with very light pubescence. Surface is covered
with a bright, attractive red blush over a yellow ground
color. Flesh is yellow, firm, smooth textured, and of
good flavor. A freestone when fully matured. Regina is
more highly colored than Redhaven and does not tend
to soften first on the suture and apex.
Bargain PEACH TREE Collection
Early To Late
1 Redwin 1 Hate Haven
1 Eriy-Red-Fre 1 Belle of Georgia
1 Redhaven 1 Redskin
3 Yellow — 3 White
Home Collection for Eating, Canning, Freezing
Six 4 to 5-ft. trees
Regular $1 2.60 Value for $ 9.95
Double This Order for $1 8.00
SAVE SPACE — SAVE S$SS
Dwarf PEACH TREE Collection
\ Dawne (yellov/) 1 Hale Haven (yellow)
1 Belle of Go. (white) 1 Elberta (yellow)
Heavy 1-yr., 3 to 4-ft. trees
Regular $12.00 Value, Only $10.95
Other Dwarf Fruit — Pages 24-27
/
V E
COMANCHE .4f) A Redhaven type peach that
ripens about with Redhaven. Size is exceptionally good,
with little thinning required. Fruits are attractive, with
firm yellow flesh, and semi-free with no spht pits.
Comanche has a desirable crop load with larger size
fruits than Redhaven.
CUMBERLAND (5) The tree is a vigorous grower.
The fruit is attractivel.y colored with red, oval in shape.
Flesh is white, almost free. Ripens just before Jubilee.
Cumberland continues to be popular in all peach sec-
tions.
X/GOLDEN JUBILEE .Sa) An old stand-by variety
that is still popular for home and near-by markets.
Fruits are medium to large, attractive, freestone, and
of good flavor. Jubilee will be more attractive and
firmer if balanced fertihzers are used. The tree and
buds are unusually hardy, resisting low temperatures
better than Elberta. Blossoms are self-fertile and are
borne in abundance.
^ FAIRHAVEN (5c) A Redhaven type peach ripening
about with Golden Jubilee. It has the same tendency to
overcrop as Redhaven, but when thinned well it brings
medium to large, round, attractive fruit. Fruits are firm,
mooth skinned, and good shippers. Fairhaven is a good
bet in its season.
RANGER (5d) A fine-looking yellow freestone peach
ripening with Golden Jubilee. Medium to large size, al-
most round, with light pubescence, highly colored with
bright red blush. Flesh yellow, medium firm, medium
textured, good flavor and suitable for canning or freez-
ing. Tree is vigorous and productive, showing marked
resistance to bacterial leaf spot. Blossoms medium sized,
self-fertile, usually open after Elberta.
V KEYSTONE (6) Keystone ripens just ahead of Trio-
gem. The fruits are large, highly colored, round, light
pubescence, bright golden ground color. Flesh is yellow,
firm, smooth textured and of good flavor, and a free-
stone. Trees are vigorous and productive, with less bac-
terial spot than Southland or Elberta. Blossoms are self-
/ fertile, require 750 chilling hours.
^ TRIOGEM— N.J. 70 (6a) An early, oval, red all
over, firm, yellow freestone peach ripening about two
days after Golden Jubilee. The trees are medium in
size, hardy and heavy bearers. Trees require good soil
and good culture for best results. Triogem has fruited
over a wide area and has gained popularity due to
heavy yields, good marketing traits, and hardiness of
tree.
V WASHINGTON (6b) A fine new peach from Virginia
that has outstanding qualities of color, size, flavor, firm-
ness of flesh, and fine texture. The buds are extremely
resistant to injury from spring frosts. It ripens about
three days after Triogem and just before Sunhigh. Trees
are vigorous and productive. Buds fiave excellent pollen
and are self-fertile. Washington will do well from
southern Virginia northward wherever spring frosts are
troublesome. Use Washington with Madison and Jeffer-
son for season-long coverage of frost-resistant peaches.
Dear Sir:
The strawberries came in very good condition. They
ivere all perfect. Thank you.
Mrs. M.\ry Anderson

Pennsylvania
Date
Source https://www.flickr.com/photos/biodivlibrary/16387288402
Author Bountiful Ridge Nurseries.; Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection.
Full title
InfoField
Planting guide : fall 1964 spring 1965.
Page ID
InfoField
42213748
Item ID
InfoField
133048 (Find related Wikimedia Commons images)
Title ID
InfoField
66139 (Find related Wikimedia Commons images)
Page numbers
InfoField
Page 8
Names
InfoField
NameFound:Medium NameConfirmed:Medium NameBankID:4904049 NameFound:Regina NameConfirmed:Regina EOLID:35504 NameBankID:4935332
BHL Page URL
InfoField
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/42213748
DOI
InfoField
10.5962/bhl.title.66139
Page type
InfoField
Text
Flickr sets
InfoField
  • Bountiful Ridge Nurseries Planting guide : fall 1964 spring 1965.
  • Garden Stories
Flickr tags
InfoField
  • Catalogs
  • Flowers
  • Fruit
  • Fruit trees
  • Nurseries (Horticulture)
  • Trees
  • U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library
  • bhl:page 42213748
  • dc:identifier https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/42213748
  • bhlGardenStories
  • BHLinbloom
  • nurseries (horticulture)
  • u.s. department of agriculture, national agricultural library
  • bhlgardenstories
  • bhlinbloom
Flickr posted date
InfoField
28 January 2015
Credit
InfoField
This file comes from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.

This tag does not indicate the copyright status of the attached work. A normal copyright tag is still required. See Commons:Licensing.


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This image was originally posted to Flickr by BioDivLibrary at https://flickr.com/photos/61021753@N02/16387288402. It was reviewed on 25 August 2015 by FlickreviewR and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0.

25 August 2015

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current04:42, 25 August 2015Thumbnail for version as of 04:42, 25 August 20151,212 × 1,779 (599 KB) (talk | contribs)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{BHL | title = Planting guide : fall 1964 spring 1965. | source = http://www.flickr.com/photos/biodivlibrary/16387288402 | description = Our Trees Are Triple Inspected For Your Protection <br> REDHAVEN <br> REDHAVEN (4c) Hardly...

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