466 THE PLUMS OF NEW YORK. 



J. L. Budd of the Iowa Experiment Station received this plum from Europe with 

 sprouts of his Ungarish. Fruit of medium size, prune-shape, bright yellow; freestone. 

 Hungarian No. 2. Domestica. 1. la. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 86. 1890. 



Imported by J. L. Budd from Russia; of little value. 

 Hunn. Triflora. i. Cornell Sta. Bui. 139:43. 1897. 2. Ibid. 175:147. 1899. 



Burbank No.i i, 2. 



A small, round plum named for C. E. Hunn of the New York State College of Agri- 

 culture; apex pointed; suture shallow; deep red; dots many, yellow; flesh soft, yel- 

 low, aromatic; quality fair; clingstone; mid-season. 



Hunt. Munsoniana X Americana, i. Am. Pom. Soc. Rpt. 78. 1897. 2. la. Sta. Bui. 

 46:275. 1900. 3. Waugh Plum, Cult. 153. 1901. 



Originated about 1880 by Henry Hunt, De Soto, Dallas County, Iowa, from seed 

 of Wild Goose probably pollinated by the De Soto, trees of which stood near. It was 

 supposed at one time that Lombard was the male parent but no traces of Domestica 

 blood can be detected in either tree or fruit; introduced in 1897 by M. J. Graham, 

 Odel, Iowa. Fruit of medium size, roundish-oval; cavity shallow; suture a line; dark 

 red; bloom heavy; dots large, conspicuous; skin thin, not astringent; flesh yellow, 

 firm, mild; quality fair; stone large, ovate, winged. 

 Hunt De Soto. Americana, i. S. Dak. Sta. Bui. 93:20. 1905. Hunt's De Soto i. 



Introduced by J. L. Budd of the Iowa Experiment Station; closely resembles 

 De Soto, differing from it in being a little larger, darker red and a better keeper. 

 Ida. Americana, i. Cornell Sta. Bui. 38:38. 1892. 2. Colo. Sta. Bui. 50:37. 1898. 

 3. Waugh Plum. Cult. 153. 1901. 



Originated with D. B. Wier of Illinois. Tree very thorny, of slow, irregular growth; 

 fruit medium, roundish-oblong; cavity shallow; stem medium, stout, dull; red over 

 yellow; bloom thick; skin thick; flesh pale yellow; quality fair; stone rotmdish, 

 rather flat, clinging; mid-season. 

 Ida Green Gage. Domestica. i. Cole Am. Fr. Book 212. 1849. 



A seedling of Reine Claude originating near Mount Ida, New York. It very 

 closely resembles its parent except that it is more strongly blushed and is a few days 

 later; obsolete. 



Idall. Munsoniana X Hortulana mineri. i. Cornell Sta. Bui. 38:56. 1892. 2. Am. 

 Card. 19:234. 1898. 3. Waugh Plum Cult. 173. 1901. 



Idal 2. Idol I. Idol i, 2. 



According to the originator, D. B. Wier, of Illinois, the Idall is a cross between 

 Wild Goose and Miner. Fruit large, roundish-oval; cavity shallow; suture a line; 

 red; dots many; skin tough; flesh yellow; good; stone of medium size, oval, cling- 

 ing ; late. 

 Imperial. Americana, i. la. Sta. Bui. 46:276. 1900. 



A small plum of the De Soto type brought to notice by C. B. Ginrich, Laporte, 

 Iowa. Fruit round, conical ; cavity broad, deep ; suture a line ; yellow with red mark- 

 ings; bloom thin; flesh clear yellow, firm, brisk, acid; good; clingstone. 

 Imperiale Alexandrina. Species? Mentioned in Mathieu Nom. Pom. 436. 1889. 



