Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station 
®'~ A , contr * st ’ - in time of bloomin S> a trait valuable for early honey flow 
possibly in seed production. y y ’ 
and 
Under Irrigation .—The twenty inch rows have been used because 
the same tools used in sugar beet culture, were convenient to use in 
al fed fa. It has become evident that even at twenty inches apart in rows. 
No. 9.—A view of the poorest portion 
in forty-two inch rows at Eastonville, Colo., 
taken June 13, 1912, one year after seeding, 
of twelve acres of Grimm alfalfa sown 
under dry-land conditions, altitude 7200 feet, 
rate of seeding two pounds per acre. 
