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Document: 17 Plums in South Dakota

Source page: Open page 23 in document reader

Institution: Open PRAIRIE | Publisher: | Year: | Pages: 89

Source URL: https://openprairie.sdstate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1092&context=agexperimentsta_bulletins

Selected Versions

Left: archivist-1.0 (fragment 3595)

Right: archivist-1.0 (fragment 10801)

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
  • Lombard | entry_pedigree | Stated explicitly as an old variety; no explicit hybrid parentage provided in this entry.
  • Lombard | growth_habit | Two station trees on sand cherry stock showed good growth after planting in 1900.
  • Lombard | hardiness_code_expansion | Noted as not sufficiently hardy for the prairie north, but still cultivated in the station trials.
  • Lombard | productivity | Station trials indicate acceptable crop/bearing performance relative to nearby entries in the same section.
  • Lombard | selection_origin_reference | Origin listed as New York, with historical use as a common European plum type in cultivation.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | description_snippet | Bears when approximately three feet tall and is considered valuable for extreme earliness.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | description_snippet | Ripe windows on this page include statements for mid-August, and evaluator notes report ripe dates from August 1st to 10th.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | entry_location | Observed and evaluated at the South Dakota Experiment Station.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | flavor_profile | A. Norby notes include firm flesh and freestone characteristics; pit free is noted in evaluator remarks.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | fruit_color | Fruit described as rich bright red.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | fruit_size | Fruit described as medium size; later notes report fruit about one to one and one-eighth inches (to one and three-eighths inches in later evaluator comments).
  • Manitoba No. 1 | keeping_quality | Described as a good keeper.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | productivity | Evaluator notes describe it as a slow grower and good bearer, with annual bearing in later quotes.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | productivity | Noted as very productive.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | selection_origin_reference | Identified as a wild variety from Manitoba.
  • Manitoba Seedlings | entry_location | Material explicitly said to have been grown at the South Dakota Experiment Station.
  • Manitoba Seedlings | recommendation_context | Introduced as a separate heading indicating mixed seedling-type entries rather than a single single-cultivar profile.
  • Manitoba Seedlings | selection_origin_reference | Class headed as a group of seedlings, originating from wild pits received from Manitoba.
Figures Added
  • none
Citations Added
  • A. Norby evaluations on Manitoba No. 1 (1902, 1903, 1904).
  • Hansen, N. E., "Plums in South Dakota," South Dakota State Agricultural College Bulletin 93 (1905).
Cultivars Removed
  • none
Claims Removed
  • Lombard | growth_habit | The trees on sand cherry stock made a good growth.
  • Lombard | productivity | The station trees on sand cherry stock bore well in 1904 for the size of tree.
  • Lombard | recommendation_context | It was one of the most commonly grown European plums, but not sufficiently hardy in the prairie northwest.
  • Lombard | rootstock_compatibility | Fair specimens at the station were grown crown-grafted in a wild plum thicket.
  • Lombard | rootstock_compatibility | Two Lombard trees on sand cherry stock grown at the station and planted in 1900 made a good growth and bore well in 1904 for the size of tree.
  • Lombard | selection_origin_reference | An old variety originated in New York.
  • Lombard | taxon_context | Listed as domestica, identifying it as a European plum.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | anecdote_snippet | A. Norby reported it blooms a little later than Aitkin and ripens August 10th, the earliest variety fruited there.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | anecdote_snippet | By 1904 it was said to bear every year and to have developed no bad qualities so far.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | culinary_use | Cooks well.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | description_snippet | A. Norby described the flesh as firm and a perfect freestone, though not free from pockets.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | description_snippet | Fruit ripe 15th to 20th of August.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | description_snippet | Fruit was described as round, beautiful, with firm meat and pit free.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | description_snippet | Later notes say it ripens from August 1st to 10th, at least a week earlier than any other variety there.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | description_snippet | Remarkable for bearing fruit on very young trees not over three feet in height.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | description_snippet | Skin rather thick and bitter.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | entry_location | A wild variety from Manitoba.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | fruit_color | A. Norby described the fruit as bright red and attractive.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | fruit_color | Color rich bright red.
  • Manitoba No. 1 | fruit_size | A. Norby reported size as about one and one-eighth inch in diameter.
Figures Removed
  • none
Citations Removed
  • A. Norby observations (1902, 1903, 1904)

Available Page Versions

IDVariantStatusModelSpecializationCountsSourceCompare
765archivist-1.0activegpt-5.4visual_page_generalist3 cultivars / 32 claims / 0 figuresOpen source page
3281archivist-1.0candidategpt-5.4visual_page_generalist3 cultivars / 18 claims / 0 figuresOpen source pageCompare to active