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Document: 17 Plums in South Dakota

Source page: Open page 45 in document reader

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

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

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Left: archivist-1.0 (fragment 3617)

Right: archivist-1.0 (fragment 10830)

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Page Version Diff

Cultivars Added
  • none
Claims Added
  • Wyant | culinary_use | Noted as comparatively poor for cooking or canning due to skin bitterness/acers; preferred more for fresh use.
  • Wyant | entry_hardiness_observation | Old station trees planted in 1888 were observed as perfectly hardy.
  • Wyant | entry_location | Observed performance includes station-grown trees on sand cherry stock.
  • Wyant | entry_pedigree | Introduced to South Dakota references through station and grower exchange networks via Prof. J. L. Budd (Iowa Agricultural College source).
  • Wyant | flavor_profile | Quality for eating was judged fair, but a bitter/acerb skin reduces value for cooking and canning.
  • Wyant | fruit_size | Fruit retains fair size even with heavy crops; on young trees can be large to very large when not bearing heavily.
  • Wyant | growth_habit | Tree described by Haralson as dwarfed, low, bushy, and strong.
  • Wyant | productivity | Described as a heavy, early and constant bearer; one report notes a very productive tree with occasional small fruit under heavy crop.
  • Wyant | selection_origin_reference | Originated about thirty-five years ago at Janesville, northeastern Iowa, and was widely introduced by Prof. J. L. Budd from the Iowa Agricultural College.
  • Wyant | source_reference_abbreviation | Multiple dated statements are attributed to Mr. Haralson (1904), A. Norby (1902, 1903, 1904), and station growers; these are direct testimonial sources for field performance.
  • Yellow Yosemite | description_snippet | Listed under Americana with only a short, positive testimonial note in this section.
  • Yellow Yosemite | source_reference_abbreviation | Recommended as very good by H. C. Warner (Forestburg, South Dakota, October 1903).
Figures Added
  • none
Citations Added
  • Hansen, N.E., "Plums in South Dakota" (1905). Bulletin Paper 93, South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station.
Cultivars Removed
  • none
Claims Removed
  • Wyant | anecdote_snippet | Norby noted that the plum gouger likes to work on this kind.
  • Wyant | breeder_reference | The variety was widely introduced by Prof. J. L. Budd of the Iowa Agricultural College.
  • Wyant | culinary_use | The acerb or bitter skin was said to detract from its value for cooking and canning.
  • Wyant | description_snippet | Excellent quality, large size, and heavy bearing are said to have given the variety wide popularity.
  • Wyant | description_snippet | Fruit on the sand cherry stock planting was ripe September 7 in 1903.
  • Wyant | description_snippet | Haralson recorded ripening on September 12 in 1904.
  • Wyant | description_snippet | In 1904 Norby called the tree good and excessively productive, with fruit averaging large on young trees but running smaller with age.
  • Wyant | description_snippet | Norby said it ripens about the same time as the Wolfs and generally bears a good crop, coming into bearing earlier than the Wolfs.
  • Wyant | entry_hardiness_observation | The trees are said to have proven perfectly hardy.
  • Wyant | entry_location | Origin location given as Janesville, northeastern Iowa.
  • Wyant | flavor_profile | Norby described the quality as fair for eating out of hand, but noted an acerb or bitter skin.
  • Wyant | fruit_size | A. Norby reported only medium size when bearing heavily, but large to very large fruit on young trees when bearing moderately.
  • Wyant | fruit_size | The fruit retains fair size even with a heavy crop, and the variety is also described as large in size.
  • Wyant | growth_habit | In 1904 Mr. Haralson noted that the tree dwarfed very much and was low, bushy, and strong.
  • Wyant | productivity | Haralson reported a heavy crop in 1904, though one tree overbore and fruit was rather small.
  • Wyant | productivity | In the old Station orchard planted in 1888, Wyant was a heavy, early, and constant bearer.
  • Wyant | recommendation_context | Historically, Wyant is described as widely and favorably known as one of the very best native plums.
  • Wyant | rootstock_compatibility | Young Station orchard trees of Wyant on sand cherry stock planted in 1901 bore a good crop of large fruit in 1903.
  • Wyant | selection_origin_reference | It originated about thirty-five years earlier at Janesville in northeastern Iowa.
  • Wyant | taxon_context | Wyant is placed under Americana.
Figures Removed
  • none
Citations Removed
  • none

Available Page Versions

IDVariantStatusModelSpecializationCountsSourceCompare
787archivist-1.0activegpt-5.4visual_page_generalist2 cultivars / 23 claims / 0 figuresOpen source page
3302archivist-1.0candidategpt-5.4visual_page_generalist2 cultivars / 12 claims / 0 figuresOpen source pageCompare to active