502 KEAV EXGLAXD TREES IN WINTER. 



SWEET CHERRY 



Mazzard Cherry, European Bird Cherry. 



Prunus avium L. 



H \ HIT — A g"ood sized tree reach in, sr 50-7." ft. in heisrht -^Mth a trunk 

 diameter of 2-3 ft.; trunk erect continuous into tlie crown ^Yitll slender 

 ascending- branches forming- a narrow pyramidal head; with age becom- 

 ing' broad-spreading. 



RAIIK — Characteristically reddish -brown with horizontally elongated 

 buff colored lenticels. tardily peeling off in transverse strips which 

 curl back and expose the lighter bark below which on very old trunks 

 may be roughened by scaly ridges; on young branches bark easily 

 peeled off in a thin dark papery layer exposing the bright green bark 

 belo'W. 



TA\'IC; S — St out, bright reddish-bro'wn. smooth and shining, more or 

 less covered with a grayish skin easily rubbed off; crushed twigs with 

 bitter taste. In addition to long- rapidly grown shoots, stubby slowly 

 grown fruit spurs with terminally clustered buds are abundant. LEN- 

 TICELS — -rather numerous, pale, becoming horizontally elongated. 

 PITH — brown. 



LEAF-SCARS — Alternate, more than 2-ranked, rather broad, semi- 

 oval to inversely triangular, raised. STIPULE-SCARS — slightly behind 

 leaf-scars, oblique, often indistinct or absent. BUNDLE-SCARS — 3. 



Bl'DS — Clustered at ends of fruiting spurs or scattered on rapidly 

 g-rown shoots; terminal bud scarcely larg-er than lateral buds; 

 lateral buds diverg-ent, stout, ovate, pointed, constricted at base, about 

 7 mm. long, reddish -brown, smooth, often partially covered with a 

 g-rayish skin. BUD- SCALES — broadly ovate, with edges often lighter 

 colored and more or less frayed and ragged. 



FRl'IT — A drupe with edible flesh, generally sweet though in some 

 varieties tart, with hard stone or pit enclosing the seed, ripening in 

 summer, with stalks generally several in a cluster arising from a 

 common point on the stem. 



COMPARISOA^S — The two types of cultivated cherries, the Sweet and 



the Sour are to be distinguished chiefly by habit of growth and relative 

 size of twigs and buds, the Sweet Cherry having a pyramidal outline 

 g-enerallj" T\'Jth a central leader and ■v\'ith relatively stout twigs and 

 larger buds. These differences are well shown in the plates. (See 

 Comparisons under Sour Cherry). 



DISTRiniTION — A native of Europe, in this covmtry cultivated for 

 Its f ru it in several improved varieties such as the Black Tartarian, 

 Ma>' I^uke. Windsor, Napoleon, etc. and in some places escaped from 

 cult i^'ation. 



AA"<>on — Strong, rather soft, close-grained, yellowish-red, taking a 

 fine pnlish; largely used in Europe for fine furniture, inside finishing- 

 and f'lr musical and other instruments. 



