PUBLICATIONS 



1749 



329-402; Emphasizing importance of wat- 

 er, pp. 373-391. 1907. 



Irrigation of Orchards. Fortier. U. S. 

 Farmers' Bulletin 404: 5-36. 1910. 



Mead. Oflace of Experiment Stations 

 Bulletin 145: 7-84, 



Irrigation in Fruit Growing. Wickson. 

 U. S. Farmers' Bulletin 116: 3-48. 1900. 



Irrigation in Field and Garden. Wick- 

 son. Farmers' Bulletin 138: 5-40 1901. 



IV. ORCHARD FERTILIZATION, FRUIT 



THIJVOTKa AISTD GIRDLIJfO 



A» Fertilization 



General Considerations 



Fertility of the Soil; What It Is. Cav- 

 anaugh. Cornell Reading Course for 

 Farmers. Ser. I, No. 3, 1901. 



Origin, Composition and Utility of Fer- 

 tilizing Materials. Davidson & Ellet. Vir- 

 ginia Bulletin 163: 3-48. 1906. 



The Use of Fertilizers. Voorhees. New 

 Jersey Bulletin 172: 3-32. 1904. 



The Fertilizers for Fruits and Berries. 

 In Voorhees' Fertilizers, p. 282. 1902. 

 (Macmillan Co.) 



Feeding the Orchard. Waters. Mis- 

 souri Station Circular 22: 1-32. 1905. 

 Anaonnts of Plant Food Used by Bearing 



xrees 



Van Slyke. N. Y, Geneva Bulletin 265: 

 205-23. 1905. 



Warren & Voorhees. New Jersey Re- 

 port 1906. pp. 192-204. 



Roberts. Cornell Station Bulletin 103: 

 621-637. 1895. 



Stewart. Pennsylvania Station Annual 

 Report. 1910-11. 

 Orchard Fertilization Experiments and 

 Their Resnlts 



Fertilization of Apple Orchards. Stew- 

 art. Pennsylvania Station Bulletin 100: 

 3-28. 1910. (Also note i-'esults of Massa- 

 chusetts Experiment on p. 24 of this Bul- 

 letin.) 



(a). Manuring an Apple Orchard- 

 Brooks. Massachusetts Station Report 

 1910, pp. 10-20. 



(b) Is It Necessary to Fertilize an 

 Apple Oi'chard. Hedrick. N. Y. Geneva 

 Station Bulletin 339, pp. 153-195. 1911. 



(c) Fruit Bud Formation. Pickett. New 

 Hampshire Bulletin 153, pp. 3-36. 1911. 



The Effect of Wood Ashes and Acid 

 Phosphate on the Yield and Color of Ap- 

 ples. Hedrick. New York Geneva Bulle- 

 tin 289: 211-235. 1907. 



Summary of Station Results to 1903. 

 Smith. U. S. Office Experiment Station 

 Report 1903. pp. 558-62. 



Orchard Experiments. Munson. Maine 

 Bulletins 89, 122, 139 and 155. These 

 bulletins give especially: (1) Results of 

 test on value of different potash salts; 



(2) Relative value of manure, Fisher 

 formula, and the station formula; and 



(3) the value of nitrogen (Bulletins 139: 

 53 and 155: 135). 



Results of Experiments with Strawber- 

 ries, Gooseberries, Raspberries, Currants 

 and Apples at Woburn and Milbrook. Bed- 

 ford & Pickering. Woburn Experimental 

 Fruit Farm Report, 1904, p. 99. 



Blake and Parley. New Jersey Report 

 1908, pp. 81-84. 



Impression of Our Fruit Growing In- 

 dustries. Bailey. N. Y. Cornell Bulletin 

 153: 122-126. 1898. 



Feeding the Orchard for Color. Chand- 

 ler. American Pomological Society Re- 

 port 1911, pp. 231-234, 



Fertilizers for the Citrus Fruits. Paint- 

 er. American Pomological Society Re- 

 port. 1911, pp. 54-58. 



Fertilizer Experiments (on Pineapples). 

 Blair & Wilson. Florida Station Bulletin 

 101: 28-42. 1910. 



Relation of Calcareous Soils to Pine- 

 apple Chlorosis. P. h. Gile. Porto Rico 

 Station Bulletin 11, pp. 5-45. 1911. 



Resnlts on Fertilizers, Obtained in 

 Orchard Snrveys 



Orchard Survey of Niagara County. 

 Cummings. Cornell Bulletin 262: 293-295. 

 1909; and Orchard Surveys by Warren. 

 Cornell Bulletins 226: 273. 1905; 229: 

 473. 1905; and 307. 1911. 



B. Thinning of Fmits 



Thinning Apples. Beach. N. Y. Geneva 

 Bulletin 239: 197-224. 1903. 



Thinning Fruit. Fisher. Montana Re- 

 ports 1905, pp. 281-284; and 1906, pp. 142- 

 154. 



Thinning Apples, Whipple. Colorado 

 Bulletin 118: 12-13. 1906. Also U. S. 



