Good Fruit Grower

April 1

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10 APRIL 1, 2014 GOOD FRUIT GROWER www.goodfruit.com SaniDate 12.0, a microbiocide from BioSafe Systems, is the chlorine alternative you've been searching for. This high-strength, cost effective, 12% peracetic acid-based treatment for irrigation waters, will control water-borne pathogens and prevent the spread of disease among crops in the field. SaniDate 12.0 will control algae, bacteria, fungi, and plant pathogenic organisms in irrigation systems without the negative impacts of chlorine on equipment, crops and the environment. Simply Sustainable. Always Effective. SEND CHLORINE PACKING. © 2014 2/14 ® LLC 1.888.273.3088 | biosafesystems.com IRRIGATION WATER MICROBIOCIDE the U.S. Army. In 1956, he got a job with Pacific Supply, based in Portland, Oregon, as a fieldman in Quincy. Carl decided to plant an orchard and started growing the nursery trees in their backyard. However, finding there were customers for the trees, he founded Colum- bia Basin Nursery instead. Four years later, in 1964, he got to plant his own orchard, using unsold trees, and Gie quit her job with a bank in Quincy to focus on the farm. As he developed his orchard, Carl became renowned in the tree fruit world. "He had innovative ideas that might not be standard," Gie recalled. For example, he was an enthusiastic member of the International Dwarf Fruit Tree Association, but decided not to plant trees on dwarfing rootstocks, which he feared would not be winter hardy enough for the Quincy area. He was convinced he could grow dwarfing trees on big rootstocks by scoring the trunks and planted a 50-acre block to prove his point. In the 1960s, he had Golden Delicious trees on seedling or Malling 106 or 111 rootstocks planted as close as three feet apart. His unorthodox ideas attracted visitors from around the world, and Carl and Gie loved to travel around the Gie and Carl Perleberg founded Columbia Basin Nursery in 1960. Carl Perleberg was renowned for his unorthodox fruit-growing techniques. He died in 1992. Dena Perleberg, pictured in 1973 with her mother, Gie, and younger sister, Carla, is already taking an interest in fruit growing.

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