FULL CROPS IN 
18 MONTHS 
A few years ago, before automobiles were all good, I often said I wished 
I could have a car with all the good points of all the makes in one car—then 
I would have a real automobile. WAYZATA is like that REAL automobile. 
It has all the good features of all strawberry varieties. First of all, it is the sweetest of all Straw¬ 
berries. It is red clear to the heart, never ripens with a green tip. One of the most noticable 
features of Wayzata is its very small hull, and this makes it easy to prepare for table use. The 
berry is well-shaped, firm, and ships well. 
Wayzata challenges the world in size and productiveness. Will bear three crops in eighteen 
months. The plants will start to bear fruit in 60 to 90 days after setting. Wayzata adapts 
itself to the widest range of soils of any variety. It does excellently in a heavy clay soil, has 
given fine results in muck bottom lands, and, of course, never fails on sandy and sandy loam 
soils. Will even give satisfactory results in the lightest of yellow sand, with a little fertilizer 
added to the soil before setting. It is hardy and tough. Has stood 40 degrees below zero with¬ 
out injury. It seems that diseases and insects just do not like the Wayzata plants. Their dark 
green, leather-like leaves are very rarely attacked by any of the common strawberry diseases 
or enemies. 
In drought-resisting, Wayzata does as well as Senator Dunlap. Wayzata makes very few 
runner plants, but makes stools of suckers that will also bear fruit. It is too busy making fruit 
buds and new stools. I have counted over 20 fruit stems on a single plant, and still more were 
coming out. The plant will be just loaded with ripe berries, green berries, blossoms and buds. 
This is continuous from July to winter. The very reason that Wayzata plants are listed higher 
than other varieties of Strawberries is that even with our scientific method of growing 
Wayzata for plants only, we have difficulty growing enough plants to supply the demand. 
DROUGHT 
RESISTING 
Wayzata PRICES 
One-Year Plants 
12 
for 
.$0.90 
25 
for . . 
. 1.35 
50 
for 
. 2.50 
75 
for . . 
. 3.25 
100 
for . . 
. 3.95 
200 
for . . 
. 6.00 
250 
for . . 
. 7.00 
300 
for 
. 8.00 
400 
for . . 
.10.50 
500 
for . . 
.12.50 
1000 
for 
.25.00 
LESS 
DISCOUNTS 
<Stsiomen. Sa^netliina Neui in- Plcuiti 
Notice the picture of the two strawberry plants. This is something new. 
This year we are listing Wayzata Strawberry clumps. The smaller plant to 
the left is a one-year-old runner plant, and the large one is a Wayzata 
clump. This clump is over ten times as large as the one-year-old plant. In 
April, 1936, this plant was only as large as the one-year plant; in six 
months it grew to the size that it is. The rule between them is an 1 8-inch 
rule, and this will give you some idea as to the size. This clump plant could 
be divided into 6 or 8 plants, and every one of them would do just as well as 
the one-year-old plant at the left, but by carefully planting this clump in 
your garden just as it is, by the middle of the summer you could have a 
single Wayzata plant as large as a bushel basket, and loaded with great 
quantities of rich red berries. 
Twenty-five clumps should furnish enough berries for an average family. 
This very clump plant, before it was dug up to make this photograph, was 
fourteen inches in diameter. These Wayzata plants were grown on rich, 
new ground—note the particle of rotted wood fibers still attached to the 
roots. These CLUMP plants are mother plants that failed to send out run¬ 
ner plants and instead sent out stool plants all around the mother plant. 
These clump plants will give marvelous results with ordinary good care 
when set in your garden. They are much easier to start than the runner 
plants, because you have more to start with. They should be planted like 
you would a tree. The roots are long and plenty of them. Spread the roots 
out all over the shallow hole. DO NOT SET TOO DEEP and tramp the soil 
firmly around the plant. Keep all the buds and blossoms off the plants for 
the first five or six weeks. This will give the plants a good start, and then 
let them blossom all they want. You will have berries within three weeks 
after they start to bloom. 
We have only a limited amount of these clump plants this year to offer, 
so get your order in early and be sure to be in on this new way of growing 
more Strawberries from a single plant. Our price is reasonable on these 
clumps when you consider that you get several plants in one when you get 
Wayzata clumps. DO NOT SET CLUMPS ANY DEEPER THAN EVEN 
WITH THE CROWN. It is always better to set any Strawberry plant too 
shallow than too deep. If set too deep the crown will rot out, and, of 
course, the plant will not do anything. The South Michigan Nursery is the 
originator of the WAYZATA CLUMPS. 
One-year Wayzata 
Runner Plant 
A Wayzata Clump 
Plant 
WAYZATA CLUMP PLANT 
PRICES 
1 for.$0.25 50 for.$5.50 
6 for. 1.00 75 for. 8.00 
12 for. 1.75 100 for.10.00 
25 for. 3.00 
LESS DISCOUNTS. Supply limited. Order early. 
