Cultivar 175: Red Lake

Taxon ID: 4

Usage Facet: class=edible; edible_score=1.0; ornamental_score=0.0; inferred_from_taxon=no

Relationships: 0 | Linked Entities (visible): 0 | Evidence claims: 31 | History events: 0 | Catalog issue offerings: 0

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Evidence Badge: supported | claims=31 | sources=5 | contradictions=0

Claim Types: recommendation_context:6, description_snippet:5, taxon_context:4, productivity:3, caption_context:2, fruit_size:2, growth_habit:2, anecdote_snippet:1, breeder_reference:1, fruit_color:1, keeping_quality:1, selection_origin_reference:1, source_reference_abbreviation:1 | Open evidence summary JSON | Open citation drawer JSON

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Wiki Draft

Red Lake is a red currant. South Dakota nursery and recommendation sources list it under Ribes sativum and treat it as a hardy currant for northern gardens. [S2] [S3] A Saskatchewan bulletin describes it as a hardy, vigorous variety from Minnesota that bears large clusters of large red fruit of excellent quality. [S4]

The cited sources do not give a breeder, parentage, or release date. They do show why Red Lake remained in prairie and northern use. South Dakota extension material lists it among recommended currants and calls it productive, while a later Saskatchewan bulletin calls it moderately productive. [S1] [S2] [S4] By 1979, South Dakota nurseries were also widely offering it, which suggests it had become a standard currant for commercial and home gardens in the region. [S3]

Fruit descriptions in the packet are brief but favorable. The best account says Red Lake has large clusters of large red berries with excellent quality. [S4] Plant descriptions are also brief. It is vigorous, and sources describe it as productive to moderately productive. [S1] [S2] [S4] Hardiness is the clearest part of its historical reputation. Saskatchewan describes it as hardy, and its inclusion in South Dakota recommendation and nursery lists supports its place among northern adapted currants. [S2] [S3] [S4]

Red Lake stands out less for a preserved breeding story than for its long practical presence across the northern plains. The surviving sources present it as a dependable red currant that remained worth listing, selling, and planting under prairie conditions. [S2] [S3] [S4]

Summary source basis

This summary currently draws chiefly from hortfacts_1976_3.pdf, with 6 additional supporting sources linked below.

Featured source descriptions

“Available from nursery listings 1, 2, 5, 6, 18, 21, 23, and 32.”
[7]
“Red Lake is productive.”
[4]
“Hardy.”
[8]
“Fruit is of excellent quality.”
[8]

Parentage

Direct parent cultivars

Parentage claim text

Lineage Links

Derived or downstream cultivar links

Story Highlights

Source-story quotations

Family Navigation

Taxonomy context: No family-tree context surfaced yet.

Related cultivars mentioned in source context

Honey Red

Cold Hardiness

Zone assertions are structured rows. Hardiness claim text appears in evidence claims and page-linked citations.

Zone MinZone MaxZone TextAssertion TypeOutcomeLocationConfidence
No explicit zone assertion rows yet.

Media Gallery

No linked media assets.

Citation Drawer (Top Supporting Sources)

DocumentTitle/URLRightsClaimsRelationshipsHistory EventsPagesSnippets
105Hardy fruits for Northern planting, trees, shrubs, 1937unknown1400p15 p30Cross-reference directs the reader to page 11.; Listed for sale as 5 plants for $1.35.; Illustrated as a red currant cluster on this advertisement page.; Presented specifically as a currant.
106Daniels planting guide, 1950unknown800p28The catalog states it is considered the most profitable not only of currants but of all small fruits.; Fruit is described as holding on the bush without shelling or shriveling, allowing marketing when prices are highest.
139Planting time, 1950 / Alpha Nurseryunknown500p6Described as a heavy bearer.; Bunches described as loose.; Berries described as bright red.; Berries described as large.
2South Dakota Fruit Garden (visual sample pages 9-11)public_domain200p2Red Lake is productive.; {"claims": [{"claim_text": "Red Lake is productive.", "claim_type": "description_snippet"}], "cultivar_name": "Red Lake", "evidence_snippet": "Red Lake is productive.", "page_number": 2, "parser_
143Recommended fruit Varietiesunknown200p3Included in the Currants & Gooseberry section with August harvest timing shown for the section.; Listed under Red Currants.

Citation Evidence (Page-Linked Quotes)

DocumentPageClaim TypeClaimQuoteMatch
139p6productivityDescribed as a heavy bearer.RED LAKE—Large berries, bunches loose, heavy bearer, bright red.page_block:0.90
139p6description_snippetBunches described as loose.RED LAKE—Large berries, bunches loose, heavy bearer, bright red.page_block:0.90
139p6fruit_colorBerries described as bright red.RED LAKE—Large berries, bunches loose, heavy bearer, bright red.page_block:0.90
139p6fruit_sizeBerries described as large.RED LAKE—Large berries, bunches loose, heavy bearer, bright red.page_block:0.90
139p6taxon_contextListed under Currants, two-year plants.RED LAKE—Large berries, bunches loose, heavy bearer, bright red.page_block:0.90
143p3recommendation_contextIncluded in the Currants & Gooseberry section with August harvest timing shown for the section.Red Currants: Red Lake, Honey Redpage_block:0.90
143p3taxon_contextListed under Red Currants.Red Currants: Red Lake, Honey Redpage_block:0.90
105p30source_reference_abbreviationCross-reference directs the reader to page 11.RED LAKE CURRANT 5 plants, $1.35 See page 11page_block:0.90
105p30recommendation_contextListed for sale as 5 plants for $1.35.RED LAKE CURRANT 5 plants, $1.35 See page 11page_block:0.90
105p30caption_contextIllustrated as a red currant cluster on this advertisement page.RED LAKE CURRANT 5 plants, $1.35 See page 11page_block:0.90
105p30taxon_contextPresented specifically as a currant.RED LAKE CURRANT 5 plants, $1.35 See page 11page_block:0.90
105p15caption_contextIllustrated on the page with the caption Red Lake Currant.RED LAKE. The introduction of Red Lake by the State Fruit Farm marks a big step forward in Currant culture.page_block:0.90
105p15anecdote_snippetF. W. Mackey of Cattaraugus County, New York wrote that the Red Lake currants sent were the finest he had ever seen and asked for 25 more for spring setting.RED LAKE. The introduction of Red Lake by the State Fruit Farm marks a big step forward in Currant culture.page_block:0.90
105p15recommendation_contextThe entry says it is easy to grow and suited to picking and market use.RED LAKE. The introduction of Red Lake by the State Fruit Farm marks a big step forward in Currant culture.page_block:0.90
105p15description_snippetRipens early midseason but holds over a long period so it can be used or marketed as desired.RED LAKE. The introduction of Red Lake by the State Fruit Farm marks a big step forward in Currant culture.page_block:0.90
105p15description_snippetExceptionally long stems make the fruit easy to pick.RED LAKE. The introduction of Red Lake by the State Fruit Farm marks a big step forward in Currant culture.page_block:0.90
105p15productivityThe bushes are described as extremely productive.RED LAKE. The introduction of Red Lake by the State Fruit Farm marks a big step forward in Currant culture.page_block:0.90
105p15growth_habitThe bushes are described as thrifty.RED LAKE. The introduction of Red Lake by the State Fruit Farm marks a big step forward in Currant culture.page_block:0.90
105p15fruit_sizeThe berries are described as big, with bunches long and well filled to the tip.RED LAKE. The introduction of Red Lake by the State Fruit Farm marks a big step forward in Currant culture.page_block:0.90
105p15recommendation_contextPresented as a major advance in currant culture for the Northwest.RED LAKE. The introduction of Red Lake by the State Fruit Farm marks a big step forward in Currant culture.page_block:0.90
105p15selection_origin_referenceIntroduced by the State Fruit Farm.RED LAKE. The introduction of Red Lake by the State Fruit Farm marks a big step forward in Currant culture.page_block:0.90
106p28recommendation_contextThe catalog states it is considered the most profitable not only of currants but of all small fruits.Red Lake The Country's Finest Red Currantpage_block:0.90
106p28keeping_qualityFruit is described as holding on the bush without shelling or shriveling, allowing marketing when prices are highest.Red Lake The Country's Finest Red Currantpage_block:0.90
106p28growth_habitRipens early to mid-season and holds on the bush for a long time without shelling or shriveling.Red Lake The Country's Finest Red Currantpage_block:0.90
106p28productivityEstablished plantings were reported as producing from $500 to $1,000 per acre at pre-Pearl Harbor prices.Red Lake The Country's Finest Red Currantpage_block:0.90
106p28description_snippetSaid to have rapidly superseded older varieties in both home and commercial plantings.Red Lake The Country's Finest Red Currantpage_block:0.90
106p28recommendation_contextUniversity authorities and growers throughout the country are said to regard it as the finest red currant yet introduced.Red Lake The Country's Finest Red Currantpage_block:0.90
106p28breeder_referenceDescribed as another triumph of the Minnesota State Fruit Breeding Farm.Red Lake The Country's Finest Red Currantpage_block:0.90
106p28taxon_contextPresented as a red currant cultivar.Red Lake The Country's Finest Red Currantpage_block:0.90
2p2description_snippetRed Lake is productive.Red Lake is productive.visual_page_probe:0.90
2p2structured_entry_json{"claims": [{"claim_text": "Red Lake is productive.", "claim_type": "description_snippet"}], "cultivar_name": "Red Lake", "evidence_snippet": "Red Lake is productive.", "page_numbeRed Lake is productive.visual_page_probe:0.90

Nursery Offering Timeline

YearNurseryCatalog IssueRelation
No catalog issue offerings linked.

Linked Entities

RelationTypeIDLabel
No linked entities at this filter level.

Evidence Claims

TypeClaimConfidence
productivityDescribed as a heavy bearer.0.93
description_snippetBunches described as loose.0.91
fruit_colorBerries described as bright red.0.94
fruit_sizeBerries described as large.0.93
taxon_contextListed under Currants, two-year plants.0.96
recommendation_contextIncluded in the Currants & Gooseberry section with August harvest timing shown for the section.0.94
taxon_contextListed under Red Currants.0.99
source_reference_abbreviationCross-reference directs the reader to page 11.0.99
recommendation_contextListed for sale as 5 plants for $1.35.0.99
caption_contextIllustrated as a red currant cluster on this advertisement page.0.98
taxon_contextPresented specifically as a currant.0.99
caption_contextIllustrated on the page with the caption Red Lake Currant.0.98
anecdote_snippetF. W. Mackey of Cattaraugus County, New York wrote that the Red Lake currants sent were the finest he had ever seen and asked for 25 more for spring setting.0.94
recommendation_contextThe entry says it is easy to grow and suited to picking and market use.0.91
description_snippetRipens early midseason but holds over a long period so it can be used or marketed as desired.0.95
description_snippetExceptionally long stems make the fruit easy to pick.0.95
productivityThe bushes are described as extremely productive.0.96
growth_habitThe bushes are described as thrifty.0.93
fruit_sizeThe berries are described as big, with bunches long and well filled to the tip.0.97
recommendation_contextPresented as a major advance in currant culture for the Northwest.0.95
selection_origin_referenceIntroduced by the State Fruit Farm.0.98
recommendation_contextThe catalog states it is considered the most profitable not only of currants but of all small fruits.0.81
keeping_qualityFruit is described as holding on the bush without shelling or shriveling, allowing marketing when prices are highest.0.90
growth_habitRipens early to mid-season and holds on the bush for a long time without shelling or shriveling.0.93
productivityEstablished plantings were reported as producing from $500 to $1,000 per acre at pre-Pearl Harbor prices.0.88
description_snippetSaid to have rapidly superseded older varieties in both home and commercial plantings.0.87
recommendation_contextUniversity authorities and growers throughout the country are said to regard it as the finest red currant yet introduced.0.83
breeder_referenceDescribed as another triumph of the Minnesota State Fruit Breeding Farm.0.93
taxon_contextPresented as a red currant cultivar.0.99
description_snippetRed Lake is productive.0.93
structured_entry_json{"claims": [{"claim_text": "Red Lake is productive.", "claim_type": "description_snippet"}], "cultivar_name": "Red Lake", "evidence_snippet": "Red Lake is productive.", "page_number": 2, "parser_mode": "visual_narrative_0.94

History Events

IDTypeYearLabel
No history events.