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NORTHERN
NUT GROWERS ASSOCIATION
INCORPORATED
AFFILIATED WITH THE AMERICAN HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
38th Annual Report
CONVENTION AT GUELPH, ONTARIO
URBANA, ILLINOIS
SEPTEMBER 3, 4, 5, 1947
TABLE OF CONTENTS
OFFICERS OF THE ASSOCIATION
EXECUTIVE APPOINTMENTS
State Vice-Presidents
Northern Nut Growers Association
Membership List as of December 1, 1947
CONSTITUTION
Article I—NAME
Article II—OBJECT
Article III—MEMBERSHIP
Article IV—OFFICERS
Article V—ELECTION OF OFFICERS
Article VI—MEETINGS
Article VII—QUORUM
Article VIII—AMENDMENTS
BY-LAWS
Article I—COMMITTEES
Article II—FEES
Article III—MEMBERSHIP
Article IV—AMENDMENTS
Article V
PROCEEDINGS
of the
Thirty-eighth Annual Convention
of the
Northern Nut Growers Association, Inc.
Meeting At
ONTARIO AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE GUELPH, ONTARIO, CANADA
SEPTEMBER 3-5, 1947
Address of Welcome
DR. J. S. SHOEMAKER, Head of Horticulture Department, Ontario Agricultural College.
RESPONSE
COMMITTEES APPOINTED
SECRETARY'S REPORT, SEPT. 3, 1947
Miss Mildred M. Jones
Report of Treasurer
For Period from September 1, 1946 to August 30, 1947.
Report from the Constitution and By-Laws Committee—Dr. MacDaniels.
Factors Influencing the Hardiness of Woody Plants
H. L. CRANE, Principal Horticulturist[1]
Nut Culture In Ontario
I. C. MARRITT, District Forester, Ontario Department of Lands and Forests
Nut Growing at the Horticultural Experiment Station, Vineland Station, Ontario
W. J. STRONG
Soil Management for Nut Plantations in Ontario
J. R. van HAARLEM, Horticultural Experiment Station, Vineland Station, Ontario
Report from Southern Ontario
ALEX TROUP, Jordan Station, Ontario
Nut Trees Hardy at Aldershot, Ontario, Canada
O. FILMAN, Aldershot
Report from Echo Valley, 1947
GEORGE HEBDEN CORSAN, Islington, Ontario
Report from Beamsville, Ontario
LEVI HOUSSER
Nut Growing in New Hampshire
L. P. LATIMER, Assistant Horticulturist, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire
Nut Notes from New Hampshire
MATTHEW LAHTI
DDT Dust versus Butternut Curculio
Persian Walnuts
Black Walnuts
Hickories
Heartnuts
Filberts and Hazelnuts
A Simplified Schedule for Judging Black Walnut Varieties
L. H. MacDANIELS and S. S. ATWOOD, Cornell University
Table I. Average scores from 18 black walnut samples cracked by three operators and computed by two scoring systems.
Table II. Scores from five samples of black walnuts each cracked by six operators according to scoring schedule II.
References Cited
Test Plantings of Thomas Black Walnut in the Tennessee Valley
SPENCER B. CHASE, Tennessee Valley Authority
The Test
The Results
Discussion
Summary
Figure 1. The Thomas variety appears well adapted to Tennessee conditions. This 7-year-old tree began bearing annual crops 3 years after planting. In 1946 it was 18 feet tall and heavily laden with nuts yielding 2½ pounds of cracked-out kernels. (Hancock County, Tenn.)
Figure 2. Black walnut makes an ideal combination nut and ornamental tree. This 8-year-old Thomas has been producing nut crops for 3 years. In addition, it has enhanced the beauty of the lawn and provided welcome shade. (Anderson County, Tenn.)
Table 1.—Number of Questionnaires Sent and Returned, Reported Tree Survival and Cause of Tree Mortality by State.
Reported cause of tree mortality
Table 2. Number of Bearing Thomas Plantings Established 1939-44, by Age of First Bearing and Growth Class.
Table 3. Tree Survival, Growth, and Percent Bearing by State and Year of Planting
Table 4. Data Obtained from Returned Questionnaires and Actual Field Examination of 40 Plantings and Field Data Only on 68 Plantings.
West Tennessee Variety, Breeding and Propagation Tests, 1947
AUBREY RICHARDS, M.D., Whiteville, Tennessee
Notes on Some Kansas and Kentucky Pecans in Central Texas
Experiences of a Nut Tree Nurseryman
J. F. WILKINSON, Rockport, Indiana
Discussion after Mr. Wilkinson's paper.
Morphology and Structure of the Walnut
C. C. LOUNSBERRY, Iowa State College
Literature Cited
A Method of Budding Walnuts
H. LYNN TUTTLE, Clarkston, Wash.
Questions asked Mr. Stoke after his demonstration of grafting and budding. [See his paper in 1946 Report, pp. 99-103.—Ed.]
Importance of Bud Selection in the Grafting of Nut Trees
G. J. KORN, Kalamazoo, Michigan
Discussion after G. J. Korn's paper.
The Hemming Chinese Chestnuts
E. SAM HEMMING, Easton, Maryland
1947 CROP
Pounds of Chestnuts from Original Trees at Eastern Shore Nurseries, Inc.
Discussion after E. Sam Hemming's paper
Results of a Chinese Chestnut Rootstock Experiment
J. W. McKAY[4]
Introduction
Description and Results
Discussion
Table I. Results of budding each of five Chinese chestnut clones on its own seedlings and on the seedlings of four other clones. The figure for each combination represents the number of buds that grew out of 20 buds placed.
Discussion After Dr. McKay's Paper
Breeding Chestnut Trees: Report for 1946 and 1947
ARTHUR HARMOUNT GRAVES[5]
Fig. 1—Japanese-American hybrid chestnut (Hammond 86-31) 34½ feet in height, 16 years old. This is the same tree three years later as that shown in figures 1 and 2, in 35th Ann. Rept. of Northern Nut Growers Assoc. for 1944. Note healthy development, as shown by foliage and long yearly growth. Hamden, Conn. Photo. Sept. 13, 1947 by Louis Buhle.
Fig. 2.—Close-up of lower part of tree in fig. 1, showing inarched basal shoots which at the beginning were as slender as the leafless shoot now showing on right side, below, coming from base of trunk. Note exposed dead part of trunk showing old canker disease. Photo Sept. 13, 1947, by Louis Buhle.
Chinese Chestnuts in the Chattahoochee Valley
G. S. JONES, Route 1, Box 140, Phenix City, Alabama
Some Results with Filbert Breeding at Geneva, N.Y.[6]
GEORGE L. SLATE New York (Geneva) Agricultural Experiment Station
Evaluating the Seedlings
Table 1. Results from filbert crosses.
Table 2. Yields and winterkilling of filbert catkins, Orchard 16, 1935 1937, 1938 and 1939. Yields are 4 year total. Catkin injury is 5 year mean
Table 3. Yields and winter injury of filbert catkins, Orchard 16, 1937-41 inclusive.
Table 4. Filbert selections. Orchard 22. Yields 1939, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1944, 1945 and 1946. Catkin injury records 1939-42, inclusive.
Table 5. Filbert selections. Orchard 8. Yields 1940, 1941, 1942 and 1944. Catkin injury records 1940, 1941 and 1942.
Discussion after Mr. Slate's paper—
Nut News from Wisconsin
CARL WESCHCKE
Home Preparation of Filbert Butter and Other Products
MRS. JEANNE M. ALTMAN, Bellingham, Washington
Notes from Central New York
S. H. GRAHAM, Ithaca, N. Y.
Experience with the Crath Carpathian Walnuts
GILBERT L. SMITH, Wassaic, New York
Observations on Hardiness of the Carpathian Walnuts at Poughkeepsie, New York
STEPHEN BERNATH
Discussion after Graham, Smith, and Bernath Persian walnut papers.
Nuts About Trees
R. E. HODGSON, Superintendent, Southeast Experiment Station, University of Minnesota.
Report on Nut Trees at Massillon
RAYMOND E. SILVIS, Massillon, Ohio
Discussion after R. E. Silvis' paper.
Planting of Nut Trees on Highways Undesirable
R. P. ALLAMAN, Harrisburg, Pa.
Nut Growing for the Farm Owner
H. GLEASON MATTOON
Tree Crop and Nut Notes from Southern Pennsylvania
JOHN W. HERSHEY
Notes from the New Jersey Section of the Northern Nut Growers Association
MRS. ALAN R. BUCKWALTER
Report of Resolutions Committee
Report of the Necrology Committee
JOSEPH GERARDI
MAJOR HIRAM B. FERRIS
Exhibitors At the Annual Meeting of the Northern Nut Growers Association, Guelph, Ontario, Sept. 3, 4, 5, 1947
Pictures Made on the 1947 Tour
The photograph on this page was taken by Sterling Smith, those on pp. 126-7 are by Dorothy Milne. Groups of NNGA members are shown examining nut trees and other items of interest on G. H. Corsan's place, "Echo Valley," Islington, Ontario.
Attendance
Announcements
Publications
Publicity
Style Manual
1948 Meeting
Hybrid Walnut Scions Offered for Nut Breeding
Hybrid Oak Information
FOOTNOTES
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