Web Links [Tag : currant]
An online resource for people who wish to produce fruit on a small scale and who are not legally licensed to use pesticides. From Pennsylvania State University.
Details Hits: 12
Votes: 0
Ratings:
Reviews:
Google PR:
Horticulture professor's survey of the taxonomy and culture of the world's major fruit crops.
Details Hits: 3
Votes: 0
Ratings:
Reviews:
Google PR:
Information on planting the bushes, caring for them, harvesting the crop and a useful illustrated section on diseases and insects.
Details Hits: 0
Votes: 0
Ratings:
Reviews:
Google PR:
Hobbyist's experimental planting of various gooseberry and black, red and white currants in central Pennsylvania. Cultivar recommendations, recipes, new cultivation practices.
Details Hits: 1
Votes: 0
Ratings:
Reviews:
Google PR:
A number of tree fruit and other resources from the Penn State University Horticulture Department. Tree pruning illustrated, tree fruit fact sheets for the small-scale and backyard grower.
Details Hits: 1
Votes: 0
Ratings:
Reviews:
Google PR:
Cultivation summaries for fruit and nut bearing plants from the common to the exotic.
Details Hits: 1
Votes: 0
Ratings:
Reviews:
Google PR:
Information on major and minor fruit and nut crops from a University of Georgia horticulture professor. Provides a botanical description, historical information, photographs, cultural notes and nutritional information.
Details Hits: 1
Votes: 0
Ratings:
Reviews:
Google PR:
Features cultivation guides, recipes, climate chart, and links
Details Hits: 2
Votes: 0
Ratings:
Reviews:
Google PR:
A simple salad to prepare but unusual. It makes a good side salad for a dish with cheese in it or to simply accompany cheese and bread. Served very chilled, it makes an appetising starter. Try it with the new season Italian pears available mid-summer onwards. Ingredients
Details Hits: 0
Votes: 0
Ratings:
Reviews:
Google PR:
Grapes are one of the oldest cultivated plants. They are classified as true berries because the fruit wall or pericarp is fleshy all the way through. The cultivation of grapes dates back more than 5,000 years in Egypt, and they were highly developed by the Greeks and Romans.
Details Hits: 3
Votes: 0
Ratings:
Reviews:
Google PR: