Black Cherries

Black Cherries

Author: Grace Stone Coates

Publisher: U of Nebraska Press

Published: 2003-01-01

Total Pages: 124

ISBN-13: 9780803264298

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In this series of linked stories the child narrator, Veve, cannot fathom all the mysteries of her family?s life together, but by watching and listening she pieces together a painful past. Played out against the backdrop of rural hardship and deprivation on the family?s Kansas farm, the secret in her father?s previous life eventually explains his harsh treatment of the three older children and her mother?s bitterness over his countless misunderstandings and slights. ø When originally published in 1931, a reviewer of Black Cherries commented that there is ?a sharpness about all impressions in the book, a keenness of sensuous and spiritual apprehension that leaves brilliant after-images with the reader.? Another described the series of sketches as ?exquisite in texture and so faithful to the childish mind that one derives a warm impression of the imagined young narrator.? ø Grace Stone Coates (1881?1976) spent most of her life in the tiny ranching community of Martinsdale in southwestern Montana. During a seven-year period, twenty of Coates?s short stories were cited in the annual Best American Short Stories as Distinctive or Honor Roll stories, and John Updike chose Coates?s ?Wild Plums? for inclusion in Best American Short Stories of the Century. Coates also published two collections of poetry.


Black Cherry Provenances for Planting in Northwestern Pennsylvania

Black Cherry Provenances for Planting in Northwestern Pennsylvania

Author: Russell S. Walters

Publisher:

Published: 1985

Total Pages: 24

ISBN-13:

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S2Black cherry is one of the most valuable eastern hardwoods, but guides for choosing suitable seed sources for planting stock are limited. After 14 years, survival of 8 of 24 sources planted is greater than 70 percent, and there are no significant differences in height. These sources offer the greatest potential for planting in northwestern Pennsylvania; they include four Pennsylvania sources and one each from Tennessee, West Virginia, Ohio, and Virginia. Although these planted trees survived and grew satisfactorily, they did not grow better than nearby natural seedlings. If natural seedlings are available, the need or desirability of planting is questionable.S3.


Cherries and Cherry Pits

Cherries and Cherry Pits

Author: Vera B. Williams

Publisher: Greenwillow Books

Published: 1986-10-20

Total Pages: 48

ISBN-13:

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Bidemmi, a girl from Kenya, draws pictures and tells stories about cherries.


Making Black Cherry Blanks from System 6

Making Black Cherry Blanks from System 6

Author: Hugh W. Reynolds

Publisher:

Published: 1986

Total Pages: 16

ISBN-13:

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S2Low-grade, small-diameter black cherry (Prunus serotina) timber was used to make System 6 cants. Cherry from the Allegheny National Forest (Ludlow, PA), west-central Pennsylvania (Glen Hope, PA), north-central Pennsylvania (Dushore, PA), western Maryland (Oakland, MD), and the Monongahela National Forest (Middle Mountain, WV) was used. The cants were resawed to 414 boards, the boards dried, and blanks were made at the Princeton Laboratory's System 6 pilot plant. By varying the rough mill procedures, differences in board quality and cutting bill requirements were accommodated keeping yields high. The cherry from the Pennsylvania and Maryland sites gave similar yields, while the West Virginia cherry gave 5 percent higher yields. Gum streak was not a problem. Pennsylvania and Maryland cherry gave a 39.0 percent return, and West Virginia cherry gave a 50.3 percent return on a $2.2 million 10-year investment.S3.


Methods for Handling Black Cherry Seed

Methods for Handling Black Cherry Seed

Author: Harold J. Huntzinger

Publisher:

Published: 1968

Total Pages: 28

ISBN-13:

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S2The methods used in handling black cherry (Prunus serotina Ehrh.) seed after it has been collected will affect the percentage of germination obtained. Studies made at our Laboratory at Warren, Pa. have shown that good germination can be obtained when the seed is properly handled and stratified. The publication reports the results obtained from three separate studies. The various operations involved in handling black cherry seed are also discussed.S3.