
PINE, SCOTCH 
JUNIPERUS VIRGINIANA 
(Red Cedar) 

Hardy EVE 
Evergreens offer permanence and year around beauty in the 
windbreak. With the proper selection of varieties you will 
find they will thrive and stand dry weather just as well as the 
deciduous trees. A good Evergreen Windbreak about the farm 
house is one of the best investments you can make. It stops the 
wind and snow, and makes the farmstead more comfortable and 
pleasant to live and work in. Evergreen Windbreaks are a 
permanent investment that increase in value each year. 
Plant Evergreens in a double row with the rows 12 to 15 feet apart. 
The trees 4 to 6 feet apart in the row. 
Evergreens are slower in developing to a size where they offer 
protection from the winds. To overcome this we recommend 
planting a few rows of fast growing deciduous trees such as 
Siberian Chinese Elm or Green Ash. These can be taken out as the 
Evergreens develop and will furnish a good supply of wood in 
addition to their value as a windbreak. 
We list two classes of Windbreak Evergreens: Seedlings and 
Transplants. 
SEEDLINGS 
Seedlings are out of the seed beds and we recommend that they 
be planted in the garden or some place where they can be given 
good care and cultivation. They can be planted close together 
(from 4 to 8 inches) before setting in the permanent windbreak. 
Shading is not necessary or recommended. We grow large quan- 
tities of this stock and offer it at low prices. 
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ONE OF OUR FIELDS OF WINDBREAK EVik 
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