Archivist Page Review

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Document: 15 The Western Sand Cherry

Source page: Open page 55 in document reader

Institution: Open PRAIRIE | Publisher: | Year: | Pages: 65

Source URL: https://openprairie.sdstate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1086&context=agexperimentsta_bulletins

Selected Versions

Left: archivist-1.0 (fragment 3525)

Right: archivist-1.0 (fragment 11242)

Next Step

Reprocess/promote controls are the next UI layer. The data foundation is now versioned and diffable.

Page Version Diff

Cultivars Added
  • none
Claims Added
  • Early Richmond | description_snippet | The two-year-old Early Richmond cherry on Sand Cherry stock was planted in a tree-tub at the Station after receipt in spring 1903.
  • Early Richmond | entry_location | The Early Richmond cherry on Sand Cherry stock was grown by G. Miller of Anita, Iowa, and received at the Station in spring 1903.
  • Early Richmond | growth_habit | The Early Richmond cherry on Sand Cherry stock was considerably dwarfed.
  • Early Richmond | productivity | In the year described, the Early Richmond tree on Sand Cherry stock bore a good crop of fruit.
  • Early Richmond | rootstock_compatibility | The page states that while it is difficult to make tame cherries unite in budding or grafting with Sand Cherry, it is not impossible, citing Early Richmond on this stock as an example.
  • Forest Garden | anecdote_snippet | Kaump bought the parent tree of an unnamed similar plum in a bunch of Forest Garden and sold the two together because they were so nearly alike.
  • Forest Garden | fruit_size | Kaump compared an unnamed low-growing early-bearing plum to Forest Garden, saying its fruit was almost like Forest Garden but a trifle smaller.
  • Forest Garden | recommendation_context | Forest Garden was named with Odegard as a plum type Kaump advised against grafting on Sand Cherry roots because such trees were considered too heavy-topped for the light stock.
  • Forest Garden | tree_form | Forest Garden is contrasted with an unnamed similar plum: one grows tall and the other grows low down.
  • Odegard | anecdote_snippet | The wind whipped the Odegard trees around more than any other tree in Kaump's orchard because of the mismatch between top growth and light Sand Cherry roots.
  • Odegard | entry_location | Three Odegard plum trees on Sand Cherry stocks were sent to L. S. Kaump of Hitchcock, South Dakota.
  • Odegard | growth_habit | The Odegard trees had grown very thrifty but were top heavy on Sand Cherry roots.
  • Odegard | productivity | The three Odegard trees were full of fruit in the 1904 season.
  • Odegard | recommendation_context | Kaump advised that if grafting on Sand Cherry roots, growers should use plums with light tops and should not use such trees as Forest Garden or Odegard.
  • Odegard | rootstock_compatibility | Kaump reported that the Odegard plums grafted on Sand Cherry roots were successful in growth but also a failure in another way because the trees were too top heavy for the light roots.
Figures Added
  • none
Citations Added
  • Iowa Experiment Station, Bulletin No. 22, p. 853. J. L. Budd, N. E. Hansen.
Cultivars Removed
  • none
Claims Removed
  • Early Richmond | entry_location | The tree was grown by G. Miller of Anita, Iowa, received at the Station in spring 1903, and planted in a tree-tub.
  • Early Richmond | growth_habit | The tree was dwarfed considerably on this stock.
  • Early Richmond | productivity | Although dwarfed considerably, the tree bore a good crop of fruit.
  • Early Richmond | rootstock_compatibility | Early Richmond cherry was successfully grown on sand cherry stock, showing that such unions, while difficult, were possible.
  • Forest Garden | anecdote_snippet | The grower said he bought the parent tree in a bunch of Forest Garden and sold the two together because they were very similar, though one grew tall and the other low down.
  • Forest Garden | description_snippet | A separate local plum tree was said to have fruit almost like Forest Garden, only a trifle smaller.
  • Forest Garden | rootstock_compatibility | Forest Garden is named with Odegard as a plum type that should not be used on sand cherry roots because of top-heaviness.
  • Odegard | anecdote_snippet | The wind whipped them around more than any other tree in the grower's orchard because of the light roots and heavy tops.
  • Odegard | entry_location | Observed in Hitchcock, South Dakota, in a report dated June 5, 1904, from L. S. Kaump.
  • Odegard | growth_habit | The trees had grown very thriftily.
  • Odegard | productivity | The trees were reported to be full of fruit that season.
  • Odegard | recommendation_context | The report advises against using top-heavy plum sorts such as Odegard on sand cherry roots.
  • Odegard | rootstock_compatibility | On sand cherry roots, Odegard plum was reported as vigorous and fruitful, but too top heavy for such light roots.
Figures Removed
  • none
Citations Removed
  • *Iowa Experiment Station, Bulletin No. 22, p. 853. J. L. Budd, N. E. Hansen.

Available Page Versions

IDVariantStatusModelSpecializationCountsSourceCompare
699archivist-1.0activegpt-5.4visual_page_generalist3 cultivars / 13 claims / 0 figuresOpen source page
3573archivist-1.0candidategpt-5.4visual_page_generalist3 cultivars / 15 claims / 0 figuresOpen source pageCompare to active