GEORGE BUNYARD & OO.'S FRUIT CATALOGUE. 



27 



NUTS.— KENT COBS AND FILBERTS. 



(No Seedlings. True from Layers.) 



Bushes, except those priced, 6j- and 9/- per dot. ; 30/- to 50/- per 100 ; Half-standards and Standards, 1/6 to 3/6 

 each; Market prices of* per 1,000 on application. 



Atlas Cob, enormous nuts, a novelty; 1/0 eaoh ; retains its foliage late. 



Bergen, new, one of the best bearing Cobs ; extra fine, 1/0 each. 



Cosfokd, nut almost round, of good flavour, with thin shell ; this and Pearson's are valuable for planting 



among others, as they produce a profusion of male catkins. 

 Filbert Prolific, of fine flavour, with a pretty frizzled husk, producing fine bunches ; elegant for dessert. 

 Filberts, Red, fine flavour, the skin of a dark colour. 



Filbebts, Turns Kentish, the finest and best flavoured ; tender in exposed places ; shy cropper. 

 Filbert Pubple Leaved, a pretty shrubbery plant, with deep Perilla-like foliage and nuts. 9/0 to 12/0. 

 'Kentish. Cob, the largest and most prolific kind, certain bearer, best market kind. Per doz., 4/0 to 6/0. 



Extra sized trees, 9/0 to 12/0 per doz. Fine bearing Standards, 2/6 and 3/6 each. 

 Mebveille de Bolwillee, most prolific, nuts very large ; shell thick. 

 Pearson's Prolific, a short round nut, cropping freely. See note above. 

 *Webb's Prize Cob, an improved Kent Gob, producing handsomer bunches. 



Nuts will flourish in stony ground, on banks, in rough or poor soils, where but few fruit trees will grow, 

 and produce a large return from seemingly worthless soil. During the season of 1880 they sold at 3/0 per 

 lb. 1894 will long be remembered as a nut year, crops of 2j tons to the acre were then gathered. 



N.B. — We shall be happy to supply Bags of 7, 14, 25 or 50 lbs. of Kent Cob Nuts, well harvested at Market 



price, in season (October — November) . 



PEACHES AND NECTARINES. 



(For open walls or glass house culture, tbtje to name.) 



Standards and Half -standards, Yearling Trees each 3/6 to 5/0 



fOn Standards, rider-trained for Walls or Peach Houses, stems 2 to 5^ft. . . ,, 7/6 to 21/0 



Yearling Dwarfs, or Maidens per doz., 18/0. . „ 2/0 



Dwarfs, full fan-trained ,, 5/0 to 10/6 



,, young trained ,, 3/6 



Established Fruiting Trees, in Pots, for Orchard House, extra fine „ 3/6 to 7/6 



Grand, extra sized Standard rider-trained Trees from the Orchard House, grown under 



glass, prices 10/6 to 63/0, and extra size Pot Pyramids and Bushes, 10/6 to 21/0. 

 The Pot Trees are well set for fruit. Not accountable for losses by frost, and Carriage is 



not paid on trees in pots, but they can be turned out and balled up if Customers desire. 



Note. — The Orchard Houses enable us to secure fruit both of Peaches and Nectarines, and thus prove 

 our stock correct. We can confidently recommend them as "true to name." July, August and September 

 are the months to inspect the Orchard Houses. 



t Where Trees are required for Houses, state the length of stem needed at 18in. from glass. 



* Refers to hardiest kinds, best for outside wall culture. 



NECTARINES. 



Medium, very rich flavour, good bearer. Earlier than Napier. 

 Mottled red ; a hardy kind. 



Medium, a new forcing kind, which requires care in culture, 

 and is liable to crack in cold houses. Not hardy outside; 

 but when forced, is 12 days earlier than Early Rivers, and 

 superb in flavour. Pot plants, 7/6 to 21/0. F.C., R.H.S. 



Large ; a richly flavoured, bronzy-fleshed fruit ; handsome and 

 good. 



Very large, white melting flesh, deep red at stone, skin purple, 

 brisk flavour, extra. 



A grand new seedling, raised by Messrs. Rivers ; not only of 

 the largest size (fruit 9£in. in circumference), but ripening 

 two weeks before Lord Napier under the same treatment, 

 weighing half a pound in weight, of very fine rich luscious 

 flavour, and of a brilliant colour ; a free cropper, and one of 

 the finest fruits ever sent out. One year pot plants 3/6 each; 

 from open ground 3/6 each. Fruiting trees in pots 7/6 to 

 21/0 ; trained on tall stems 10/6 to 42/0 each ; dwarf trained 

 5/0 to 10/6. F.C., R.H.S. 



