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THE NTJESEET. 



taking a crop, every two years. Tliis is tlie system recoii' 

 mended to those who want^r<s^ rate quince stocks. 



The very general lack of information in this country oB 

 the subject of quince stocks for pears has given rise to a 

 great many misapprehensions and erroneous statements in 

 regard to them, both by hoii"icultural wi-iters and others. 

 At first it was said that the stock used" by the French and 

 imported by nurserymen here were the Portugal. Again, 

 it was discovered they were nothing more than the com- 

 mon apple quince ; consequently a multitude of the apple 

 quinces have been worked, and sent out as " dwarf pears. 

 The slow and feeble growth of this variety unfits it entirely 

 for a stock for the pear, and only a very few varieties will 

 form a imion with it that will last over three or four years. 

 Such trees cannot fail to give general dissatisfaction, and 

 among people who know no better, create a prejudice 

 against quince stocks in general. Indeed this is the cause 

 why BO much has been said about the pears on quince 

 being so short-lived. 



The truth is, that the varieties used in France are nei- 

 ther the Apple nor the Portugal Quince, but vigorous 

 hybrids that have been originated there, and found t(> 

 answer this purpose particularly well. The great requisite 

 of a quince stock for the pear is ^ free^mgoi^oits and 

 growth. A variety originated at the town of Angers iu 

 France, and extensively used, propagated and sold there 

 as the Angers Quince^ is probably the best yet known foj 

 a pear stock generally. It is a very rapid, vigorous grower 

 making strong shoots three feet long in one season. It hat 

 large foliage resembling the Portugal. In some parts ot 

 France, as in Normandy, it is known as the Iroad-leaved 

 There is another variety with smaller leaves, but of free 

 vigorous growth too, almost exclusively cultivated in some 

 districts. Several extensive nurserymen at Orleans, Paris, 

 and elsewhere, consider it superior to the broad-leaved. 



