workhorse_01
Well-Known Member
Yeah, I hope that goes through, what a difference that would make for FM. With Jessica joining the group it put his site miles above the others on the net. In knowledge and seed availability.
Many thanks for all the seed contributions this year from my fellow members. I hope to pay forward that generosity.
Best of luck to your grow out Knucklehead, you have bitten off alot of work there - its good to see your growing out all those grin varietys for FTT - hats off mate
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PI 405566 Turkish
PI 405568 Turkish
Harmanliiska Basma # 163 PI 286819 Bulg.
Kozarsko # 541 PI 286820 Bulgarian
Nevrokop # 5 PI 286823 Bulgarian
Sultansko PI 286828 Bulgarian
Alma-Ata 315 PI 293909 Bulgarian
Djebel 174 PI 321709 Bulgarian
Ostrolist B-27-47 PI 321712 Bulgarian
I wish you succes on growing this huge list Knucky. Looks like a good list but especially I'm really curious about the Oriental list above.
But the one variety in this list has a speciality, it's actually an Oriental variety from Kazakhstan, Alma-Ata. Alma-Ata was a capital of Kazakh SSR so probably this variety travelled a lot in other Eastern Block countries including Bulgaria. After collapsing of the USSR, Kazakstan declared it's independency and changed the capital to Astana. Also in modern language Alma-Ata is written like Almatı.
I want to add an anecdote about the name "Alma-Ata". According to Turkish mythology, the first Apple tree in the planet Earth was planted in this place and Alma-Ata means "the ancestor of the apple" or "the place where the apple spread all over the World". Elma means "apple" in Turkish (dialect of Turkey), it's a little different but very reminiscent in other Turkish dialects, like Alma/Ulma/Ulmo/Olma, even in Hungarian it's "Alma".
I've heard that the apple tree really did originate in Khazakstan and there are entire apple forests there. That would be a sight, especially now when they're in bloom.I want to add an anecdote about the name "Alma-Ata". According to Turkish mythology, the first Apple tree in the planet Earth was planted in this place and Alma-Ata means "the ancestor of the apple" or "the place where the apple spread all over the World". Elma means "apple" in Turkish (dialect of Turkey), it's a little different but very reminiscent in other Turkish dialects, like Alma/Ulma/Ulmo/Olma, even in Hungarian it's "Alma".
I bought some markers made by Dykem from McMaster-Carr. I hope they hold up better. I plan to mark the stakes, tag each plant when they get bigger, tag the bags and draw a map. I'll draw the map after the plants are in the ground. The sticks I'm using are layout stakes, one for each variety. I'm sure open to any suggestions anyone may have.Wallace,
It looks like your most critical job will be maintaining labels. Remember that Sharpie slowly fades in the sun. Labeled sticks break off and blow away. Maps are nothing more than expectations. Best of luck.
Bob
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