ON PEARS. 109 



2, It is agreeable to all that we know of the effects of freezing that the new wood, or 

 the latest growth, should suffer most. Thus the young of peach trees in some locations is 

 often destroyed. The ends of limbs are dead. But not so in blight. The disease rarely 

 begins with the extremity, but usually in the middle of a branch, as has been already 

 described, and this not until after the limb has been covered with a vigorous growth of 

 leaves and new wood, or an extension of its branches has taken place. In such a case it 

 can hardly be supposed that it is really the same sap which has been supposed to have 

 been frozen in the opening of spring, or during the winter. This sap has already been 

 expended in the growth of new parts, and a new formed sap supplies the plant with this 

 circulating fluid. 



3. It seems more consonant with facts, to infer that when a vegetable is destroyed, im- 

 mediately or ultimately, by frost, that death takes place by injury which the solids sustain, 

 rather than by the injury of the fluids. The change in this case in the fluids is an effect, 

 and not a cause — the solids themselves being the organs by which healthy fluids are gene- 

 rated, though it still remains true that when the fluids are imperfectly formed, or are chan- 

 ged in their essential properties, that death or injury to the structure must necessarily fol- 

 low, notwithstanding the solids are in a healthy state. The foregoing considerations are 

 suflicient with us for the rejection of the theory which maintains that frozen sap is proxi- 

 mately the cause of blight in fruit trees. To these we might still add other considerations 

 which go to disprove it. So we dissent, also, from the views of the author of this theory 

 in regard to the proposed remedy, viz., a coating of whitewash. This seems to have been 

 proposed from a misapprehension of the nature of the coating itself; for, in fact, so far as 

 the coaling operates at all, it must promote rather than retard the freezing of the sap. An 

 earthy material, of the nature of whitewash, is a better conductor of heat than the porous 

 and partially dry cuticle itself. The remedy which has been proposed for the treatment of 

 blight, is simple, but strikes not at the root of the evil. The limb, when found affected, 

 may be removed ; it is no longer a living part of the vegetable system. A close inspection 

 of the bark, with incisions of the cuticle, will show the extent of the disease, and all that 

 is diseased may be removed at once. It does not follow, however, that because a limb is 

 not removed the whole tree will certainly die, for instances do occur where the tree lives 

 on with its dead branches remaining. The knife, however, can be freely applied, for 

 the limb is irreparably gone, and the fear that contaminated fluids may occur, by which 

 the disease is extended, may stimulate us to the excision of the member. 



The period when the blight begins is about the middle of June, after there has been a 

 considerable part of the growth of wood for the year. It must often seem that temperature 

 has something to do with the disease, and still the only fact which favors this view of the 

 subject, is time, for it is not to be supposed that a certain degree of heat will cause the dis- 

 ease, and if it has any thing to do with it, it is only one of the conditions. Without recur- 

 ring to theoretical grounds, or those which stand upon, the known properties of matter, as 

 it regards the conductibility of caloric, we believe experience has fully disproved the 

 theory. 



