DESCRIPTIVE LIST OF NATIVE GRAPES. 259 



LOGAN. 



This is a new grape which is recommended by the 

 .Imerican Pomological Society ^s promising well. It 

 ripens about the first of September; is black, sweet 

 and good. Bunches and berries large. 



A. Thomson, Esq., of Delaware, Ohio, describes it 

 as follows : " It is a black grape, ripening before the 

 Catawba, and preferred to the Isabella, and is believed 

 to be a wilding of Ohio ; hardy, vigorous ; wood 

 short-jointed and compact ; distinct in wood and foli- 

 age, productive, and probably the earliest hardy 

 grape of fair quality in cultivation, and will ripen its 

 fruit several degrees further north than the Isabella 

 and Catawba." 



EARLY NORTHERN MUSCADINE. 



With regard to this grape, the most contradictory 

 accounts have been published. Some pomologists 

 speak of it in high terms,' and by others it has been 

 as fiercely condemned. A gentleman, in whom we 

 have every confidence, assures us that wherever he 

 has introduced it it has given satisfaction, and wo 

 believe that he has no peculiar interest in this par- 

 ticular variety. Our own experience is not sufiicient 

 to warrant us in giving a decision, and we therefore 

 append a statement by Messrs Lewis and Brainard, 



