LIST OF VARIETIES 



91 



in fact, it often happens that a grower will have 

 some particular strain which he has developed by a 

 long process of selection and which is peculiarly 

 adapted to his soil and situation, and he regards it 

 as superior to the original variety, and that is often 

 true. (See Fig. 21.) Such strains, however, often 

 prove disappointing when the seed is carried to 



Fig. 22. A trio of Tip Tops from :he Ohio valley. 



Other localities and planted 'n different soils and 

 grown under different climatic conditions. 



Varieties have their preferences as to soil and 

 climate; hence it often happens that one variety 

 will prove valuable in one locality and very undesir- 

 able in another. Hence, the necessity for the large 

 number of varieties which we now have in the 

 United States. For example, in one of the large 

 melon districts of the middle West, the Rocky Ford 



