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قراءة كتاب Apple Growing
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APPLE GROWING
APPLE
GROWING
BY
M.C. BURRITT
NEW YORK
OUTING PUBLISHING COMPANY
MCMXII
Copyright, 1912, By
OUTING PUBLISHING COMPANY.
All rights reserved.
PREFACE
In the preparation of this book I have tried to keep constantly before me the conditions of the average farm in the Northeastern States with its small apple orchard. It has been my aim to set down only such facts as would be of practical value to an owner of such a farm and to state these facts in the plain language of experience. This book is in no sense intended as a final scientific treatment of the subject, and if it is of any value in helping to make the fruit department of the general farm more profitable the author will be entirely satisfied.
The facts herein set down were first learned in the school of practical experience on the writer's own farm in Western New York. They were afterwards supplemented by some theoretical training and by a rather wide observation of farm orchard conditions and methods in New York, Pennsylvania, the New England States and other contiguous territory. These facts were first put together in something like their present form in the winter of 1909-10, when the writer gave a series of lectures on Commercial Fruit Growing to the Short Courses in Horticulture at Cornell University. These lectures were revised and repeated in 1910-11 and are now put in their present form.
The author's sincere thanks are due to Professor C.S. Wilson, of the Department of Pomology at Cornell University, for many valuable facts and suggestions used in this book, and for a careful reading of the manuscript. He is also under obligations to Mr. Roy D. Anthony of the same Department for corrections and suggestions on the chapters on Insects and Diseases and on Spraying.
M.C. Burritt.
Hilton, N.Y.
February, 1912.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER | PAGE | |
I. | The Outlook for the Growing of Apples | 11 |
II. | Planning for the Orchard | 18 |
III. | Planting and Growing the Orchard | 30 |
IV. | Pruning the Trees | 48 |
V. | Cultivation and Cover Cropping | 62 |
VI. | Manuring and Fertilizing | 78 |
VII. | Insects and Diseases Affecting the Apple | 92 |
VIII. | The Principles and Practice of Spraying | 108 |
IX. | Harvesting and Storing | 127 |
X. | Markets and Marketing | 142 |
XI. | Some Hints on Renovating Old Orchards | 153 |
XII. | The Cost of Growing Apples | 164 |
APPLE GROWING
CHAPTER IToC
THE OUTLOOK FOR THE GROWING OF APPLES
The apple has long been the most popular of our tree fruits, but the last few years have seen a steady growth in its appreciation and use. This is probably due in a large measure to a better knowledge of its value and to the development of new methods of preparation for consumption. Few fruits can be utilized in as many ways as can the apple. In addition to the common use of the fresh fruit out of hand and of the fresh, sweet juice as cider, this "King of Fruits" can be cooked, baked, dried, canned, and made into jellies and other appetizing dishes, to enumerate all of which would be to prepare a list pages long. Few who have tasted once want to be without their apple sauce and apple pies in season, not to mention the crisp, juicy specimens to eat out of hand by the open fireplace in the long winter evenings. Apples thus served call up pleasant memories to most of us, but only recently have the culinary possibilities of the