Red Oak 



(Quercus rubra) 



Highly ornamented in spring and autumn. Hardy in all parts of 

 Idaho. Requires good soil and plenty of moisture. 



Purple Willow Cuttings 



(Sali.v amcricana var. purpurca) 



Require abundant moisture. Will grow from three to six feet per 

 year. Make excellent windbreaks for orchards, buildings, or stock. 

 Hardy in all parts of Idaho. 



American Willow Cuttings 



(Salix americana) 



Will grow from two to four feet per year in good soil with plenty ot 

 moisture. Make good windbreaks for orchards, buildings, or stock. 

 Hardy in all parts of Idaho. Willows must not be set close to ditches, as 

 the roots are apt to choke them up. 



Austrian Pine 



(Pinus austriaca) 



Valuable as an ornamental tree or as a windbreak; rapid-growing 

 and hardy any place in the state. Will thrive with twenty inches or more 

 of rainfall or under irrigation. 



Jack Pine 



(Pinus divaricata) 



We recommend this pine as better adapted to the dryer parts of 

 southern Idaho than any other. It will grow on very sandy soil and make 

 very rapid growth on good soil. It has not been tried under irrigation 

 but we are led to believe that it will make a strong growth. It is frost- 

 hardy at Moscow, and will probably do well in all parts of the state at 

 elevations below 4500 feet and where the rainfall is fifteen inches or more. 



Scotch Pine 



(Pinus sylvestris) 



This is a very hardy pine and has been thoroly tried out in Moscow. 

 It has done well at various points in the state and we recommend it as 

 suited to any elevation where rainfall is 15 inches or more or under 

 irrigation. 



Douglas or Red Fir 



(Pseudotsuga taxifolia) 



We are growing both the coast and the Rocky Mountainvarieties of 

 this tree. We recommend both for the northern part of the state, but 

 only the Rocky Mountain variety for the drier portions of southern 

 Idaho. This variety will grow at any elevation and will respond vigor- 

 ously to irrigation. A valuable tree for parks, windbreaks, and woodlots. 



Caution: In transplanting any evergreens great care must be taken 

 to keep the roots always moist. A few minutes in the sunshine will so 

 harden the pitch in the "roots that the trees are very apt to die. In trans- 

 planting, all trees should be placed from one to two inches deeper than 

 they originally grew, the hole should be made large, roots spread well, 

 and the earth packed firmly. If the soil is dry the use of a moderate 



