How Plants Are Trained to Work for Man: Grafting and Budding
The fragrance of the flower was not put forth to please or displease man, but to please and attract the insect. In the case of the scented calla it was perfume that differentiated a particular individual from thousands of other individuals growing in the same plot.

At an early stage of Burbank's almost endless series of experiments in the hybridizing of plums, he chanced to hear of a so-called seedless plum that was said to grow in France, where it had been known for a long time as a curiosity. The fruit was by no means stoneless, but from the onset Burbank was convinced that by proper hybridizing and selective breeding it could be made valuable.

Species of plants in a state of nature are constantly crossing and new species are being developed under our eyes. Except by the accidental and most unusual transfer of a plant through the agency of a passing animal, there is hardly the remotest chance of effecting cross-fertilization between individual mosses or lichens or ferns growing in widely separated regions.

Luther Burbank was widely known as a botanist and scientist. His fame as an inventor of new fruits, plants and flowers inspired worldwide interest in plant breeding, for which he was recognized by an Act of Congress, among many other honors.

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How Plants Are Trained to Work for Man: Grafting and Budding
The fragrance of the flower was not put forth to please or displease man, but to please and attract the insect. In the case of the scented calla it was perfume that differentiated a particular individual from thousands of other individuals growing in the same plot.

At an early stage of Burbank's almost endless series of experiments in the hybridizing of plums, he chanced to hear of a so-called seedless plum that was said to grow in France, where it had been known for a long time as a curiosity. The fruit was by no means stoneless, but from the onset Burbank was convinced that by proper hybridizing and selective breeding it could be made valuable.

Species of plants in a state of nature are constantly crossing and new species are being developed under our eyes. Except by the accidental and most unusual transfer of a plant through the agency of a passing animal, there is hardly the remotest chance of effecting cross-fertilization between individual mosses or lichens or ferns growing in widely separated regions.

Luther Burbank was widely known as a botanist and scientist. His fame as an inventor of new fruits, plants and flowers inspired worldwide interest in plant breeding, for which he was recognized by an Act of Congress, among many other honors.

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How Plants Are Trained to Work for Man: Grafting and Budding

How Plants Are Trained to Work for Man: Grafting and Budding

by Luther Burbank
How Plants Are Trained to Work for Man: Grafting and Budding

How Plants Are Trained to Work for Man: Grafting and Budding

by Luther Burbank

Paperback

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Overview

The fragrance of the flower was not put forth to please or displease man, but to please and attract the insect. In the case of the scented calla it was perfume that differentiated a particular individual from thousands of other individuals growing in the same plot.

At an early stage of Burbank's almost endless series of experiments in the hybridizing of plums, he chanced to hear of a so-called seedless plum that was said to grow in France, where it had been known for a long time as a curiosity. The fruit was by no means stoneless, but from the onset Burbank was convinced that by proper hybridizing and selective breeding it could be made valuable.

Species of plants in a state of nature are constantly crossing and new species are being developed under our eyes. Except by the accidental and most unusual transfer of a plant through the agency of a passing animal, there is hardly the remotest chance of effecting cross-fertilization between individual mosses or lichens or ferns growing in widely separated regions.

Luther Burbank was widely known as a botanist and scientist. His fame as an inventor of new fruits, plants and flowers inspired worldwide interest in plant breeding, for which he was recognized by an Act of Congress, among many other honors.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780898752915
Publisher: University Press of the Pacific
Publication date: 07/01/2001
Series: How Plants Are Trained to Work for Man , #2
Pages: 456
Product dimensions: 5.12(w) x 8.00(h) x 1.16(d)

Table of Contents

The Fragrant Calla7
The Stoneless Plum35
The Royal Walnut61
The Winter Rhubarb87
The Burbank Cherry111
The Sugar Prune133
Some Interesting Failures159
Planning a New Plant185
Plant Affinities213
Practical Pollination235
Quantity Production267
Grafting and Budding297
Letting the Bees Do Their Work331
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