MICHIGAN EXPERIMENT STATION BULLETINS. 



159 



2. Prunua cerosois.— Acid cherriee.— Dakee, Morellos and others. 



6 



7 



8 



9 



10 



11 



12 

 13 

 14 

 \f) 



16 

 17 



18 

 19 

 20 



21 



22 

 23 

 24 

 25 



26 



27 

 28 

 29 

 30 



31 

 32 

 33 

 34 

 35 



:}6 

 37 

 38 

 39 

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41 



42 



Name, 



Abbesse (Oigniea) 



Angonleme 



Baender 



Bessarabian 



Brasseler Branne 



Carnation 



Choisy .: 



Dyehonse 



Early Richmond ..- 



Eugenie 



Everbearing 



Franendorfer Weicheel. 



Galopin ... 



George Glass 



Griotte do Nord 



Hortense 



King Amarelle... 



Lake Duke 



Lithauer Weichsel 



Loais Phillippe.. 



Lntovka 



Magnifique 



Mahaleb... _ 



May Duke 



Minnesota Ostheim 



Montmorency 



Montmorency Large 



Montmorency Ordinaire 



Montrueil 



Northwest 



Olivet 



Ostheim 



Ostheimer 



Eoyal Duke 



Bklanka 



Spate Amarelle 



Strauss Weichsel 



Suda.. . 



Twenty-Five Orel 



Twenty-Seven Orel 



Weir No. 2 



Wragg 



QQ 



Morello. 

 Duke? . 

 Morello. 



Duke. 

 Morello. 



Duke ... 



Morello. 



Duke... 

 Morillo. 

 Duke... 

 Morello 



Duke... 



Ma. 



Duke... 

 Morello. 



Duke... 

 Morello 



Duke... 

 Morello. 



Duke..] 



Morello. 



o 



Ol 



a 



A 



lowa.- 



Ag. Col. 

 Iowa . 



N. Y.... 



Mich 



N. Y. ... 



Mich 



N. Y.... 



Ag. Col.. 

 Iowa .. 

 Ag. Col, 

 Iowa . . 



Mich.... 

 Ag. Col. 

 Mich... 

 Ag. Col, 

 Mich — 



Iowa.. .. 

 Mich.... 

 Ag. Col. 



Mich 



Ag. Col. 



Mich ... 

 N. Y.... 



Ag. Col, 



Mich.... 



Iowa 



Ag. Col. 



Mich 



Iowa 



Ag. Col, 



lowa. 





1888. 

 1888. 

 1892. 



1888. 

 1888. 



1890. 



1888. 

 1890. 

 1888. 

 1888. 



1892. 



1888 



1892. 



1888. 



1888. 



1888. 

 1892. 

 1890. 

 1892. 



1888. 



1888. 

 1888. 

 1892. 

 1888. 

 1892. 



1888- 

 1890. 

 1890. 

 1890. 

 1892. 



S 

 o 

 o 



.a 



May 16. 

 " 16. 



1888. 

 1888. 

 189^. 

 1890. 



1888. 



1888. 

 1888. 

 1892. 

 1892. 

 1892. 



1892. 

 1891. 



May IS 



" 17. 



" 16. 



" 13, 



" 17. 



" 16. 



" 13. 



May 13. 



May 17. 

 " 16. 



" 16. 



May 15. 



May is! 



•' 16. 

 •' 18. 



May 11. 



May 16. 

 " 15. 

 " 18. 

 " 15. 



May 16. 

 " 16. 



17. 

 16. 



16. 

 16. 



May 19. 



Kemarks. 



A very slow grower. Russian. 



A good grower. From Prof. Badd. 



Origin not known. 



Large, dark, acid, juicy, cnlinciry. 



From Bud's importations. 



Old, but rare. 



Beautiful and excellent. 



Origin, Kentucky. 



The most popular market cherry. 



New and not much disseminated. 



Very little known. 



From Prof. Budd of Iowa. 



History unknown. 



From Prof. Budd of Iowa. 



Large and good 



Comes to us without a history. 



Originated in France. 



History nnkn'n. Probably Ger man 



Very late. A thin bearer. 



Imported by Prof. Budd. 



A good late cherry. 



Generally used as a stock. 



The type, and the best of its class. 



A probable native of the northwest. 



Probably identical with the foU'lng. 



Of Frence origin. 



Smaller but more productive. 



Recent and promising. 



History not known. 



Recent and valuable. 

 Received from Prof. Budd. 

 History unknown. 

 An old but rare variety. 

 Received from Prof. Budd. 



Received without a history. 



Oue of D. B. Weir's 111. seedlings. 

 Probably an unrecognized old var. 



For a plantation of sweet cherries (which to prevent bark burst and 

 consequent disease) should always be branched low to shade the trunk 

 and large branches, and only a moderate, regular and healthy growth 

 encouraged. Early Purple, Coe Transparent, Elton, Black Eagle, 

 Downev, and perhaps Windsor, will furnish a satisfactory succession, in 

 latitude 43°, from June 1 to nearly the first of August. 



Of the Dukes and Morellos — ^Choisy, which is one of the best as well as 

 the most beautiful, but unfortunately lacking productiveness, may be 

 planted to open the season about the middle of June, and by following 

 this with Early Richmond, May Duke, Late Duke, Louis Phillippe (large 

 but a light bearer) and Magnifique, the season may be extended well into 

 August, if only the birds can be circumvented. 



Of sweet cherries a good market list would be Black Tartarian, Napoleon, 



