Ls Land Issue 15 Little Duchess 21 30 363
Download > https://ssurll.com/2t7gO9
In 1500, Charles V was born in Ghent. He inherited the Seventeen Provinces (1506), Spain (1516) with its colonies and in 1519 was elected Holy Roman Emperor.[11] Charles V issued the Pragmatic Sanction of 1549, which established the Low Countries as the Seventeen Provinces (or Spanish Netherlands in its broad sense) as an entity separate from the Holy Roman Empire and from France. In 1556 Charles V abdicated due to ill health (he suffered from crippling gout).[12] Spain and the Seventeen Provinces went to his son, Philip II of Spain.
In 1815, the Dutch Senate was reinstated (Dutch: Eerste Kamer der Staaten Generaal). The nobility, mainly coming from the south, became more and more estranged from their northern colleagues. Resentment grew between the Roman Catholics from the south and the Protestants from the north, and also between the powerful liberal bourgeoisie from the south and their more moderate colleagues from the north. On 25 August 1830 (after the showing of the opera 'La Muette de Portici' of Daniel Auber in Brussels) the Belgian Revolution sparked. On 4 October 1830, the Provisional Government (Dutch: Voorlopig Bewind) proclaimed its independence, which was later confirmed by the National Congress that issued a new Liberal Constitution and declared the new state a Constitutional Monarchy, under the House of Saxe-Coburg. Flanders now became part of the Kingdom of Belgium, which was recognized by the major European Powers on 20 January 1831. The cessation was recognized by the United Kingdom of the Netherlands on 19 April 1839.
Flanders has two main geographical regions: the coastal Yser basin plain in the north-west and a central plain. The first consists mainly of sand dunes and clayey alluvial soils in the polders. Polders are areas of land, close to or below sea level that have been reclaimed from the sea, from which they are protected by dikes or, a little further inland, by fields that have been drained with canals. With similar soils along the lowermost Scheldt basin starts the central plain, a smooth, slowly rising fertile area irrigated by many waterways that reaches an average height of about five metres (16 feet) above sea level with wide valleys of its rivers upstream as well as the Campine region to the east having sandy soils at altitudes around thirty metres.[f] Near its southern edges close to Wallonia one can find slightly rougher land, richer in calcium, with low hills reaching up to 150 m (490 ft) and small valleys, and at the eastern border with the Netherlands, in the Meuse basin, there are marl caves (mergelgrotten). Its exclave around Voeren between the Dutch border and Wallonia's Liège Province attains a maximum altitude of 288 m (945 ft) above sea level.[28][29]
US-1279. Standard size rootstock for sweet orange and other citrus scions that appears to provide some improved tolerance to Huanglongbing (HLB) at Florida flatwoods sites. Origin: USDA-ARS, Ft. Pierce, FL, by K.D. Bowman. Changsha mandarin × Gotha Road trifoliate orange, crossed 1995 at A.H. Whitmore Foundation Farm, Groveland, FL; tested as BS95-V3-11; released 2014. Plant: upright; growth rate medium; leaves trifoliate; does not produce true-to-type seedlings, so uniform seed propagation is impossible; propagation is recommended by stem cuttings for small quantities, or tissue culture for large quantities. Rootstock performance: provides superior fruit productivity with sweet orange as compared with trees on Swingle rootstock grown in the Florida flatwoods, and infected with Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus, the causal agent of HLB; fruit size and TSS/acid ratio was significantly higher for Hamlin orange on US-1279 than on Swingle; trees on US-1279 appear to be more tolerant to HLB than Swingle in the East Coast Florida flatwoods, but did not appear to be superior to trees on Swingle or Carrizo rootstocks at a Florida ridge site with HLB.
US-1281. Standard size rootstock for sweet orange and other citrus scions that appears to provide some improved tolerance to Huanglongbing (HLB) at Florida flatwoods sites. Origin: USDA-ARS, Ft. Pierce, FL, by K.D. Bowman. Cleopatra mandarin × Gotha Road trifoliate orange, crossed 1995 at A.H. Whitmore Foundation Farm, Groveland, FL; tested as BS95-V5-10; released 2014. Plant: upright; growth rate medium; leaves trifoliate; does not produce true-to-type seedlings, so uniform seed propagation is impossible; propagation is recommended by stem cuttings for small quantities, or tissue culture for large quantities. Rootstock performance: provides superior fruit productivity with sweet orange as compared with trees on Swingle rootstock grown in the Florida flatwoods, and infected with Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus, the causal agent of HLB; fruit size and TSS/acid ratio were significantly higher for Hamlin orange on US-1281 than on Swingle; trees on US-1281 appear to be more tolerant to HLB than Swingle in the East Coast Florida flatwoods.
US-1282. Standard size rootstock for sweet orange and other citrus scions that appears to provide some improved tolerance to Huanglongbing (HLB) at Florida flatwoods sites. Origin: USDA-ARS, Ft. Pierce, FL, by K.D. Bowman. Cleopatra mandarin × Gotha Road trifoliate orange, crossed 1995 at A.H. Whitmore Foundation Farm, Groveland, FL; tested as BS95-V5-78; released 2014. Plant: upright; growth rate medium; leaves trifoliate; does not produce true-to-type seedlings, so economical seed propagation is impossible; propagation is recommended by stem cuttings for small quantities, or tissue culture for large quantities. Rootstock performance: provides superior fruit productivity with sweet orange as compared with trees on Swingle rootstock grown in the Florida flatwoods, and infected with Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus, the causal agent of HLB; fruit size and TSS/acid ratio were significantly higher for Hamlin orange on US-1282 than on Swingle; trees on US-1282 appear to be more tolerant to HLB than Swingle in the East Coast Florida flatwoods.
Gofert. Very productive, regular bearing black currant well suited to machine harvesting. Origin: Fruit Breeding Department, Research Institute of Horticulture, Skierniewice, Poland, by E. Zurawicz and S. Pluta. Golubka × Fertödi-1, crossed 1987; selected 1996 as PC-1. USPP 27,063; 16 Aug. 2016. Fruit: medium to large; globose; black; medium to firm; ripens midseason. Plant: tall; diameter medium; number of basal shoots medium; bud burst midseason; flowers early; yield high; well suited to machine harvesting; winter hardy; no noticeable disease or pest issues.
Chelsea C-28. Hazelnut for in-shell market. Origin: Courtland, ON, Canada, by M. Hodgson. Parentage unknown, O.P. seeds from parent trees that included Barcelona, Slate, Gellatly, Myoka, Petoka, and Grimo 502; planted 1992-95; selected 2008; tested as C-28; introd. 2017. Canadian PBR 5492; 15 June 2017. Nut: large, long cylindrical, conspicuous stripes; low kernel percentage; very little fiber on the pellicle. Husk: shorter than or equal in length to nut, not constricted, most nuts fall free of the husk; matures very late. Tree: vigor moderate to high; growth habit upright-spreading; suckers few; highly resistant to eastern filbert blight; female inflorescences receptive late; incompatibility alleles not tested. 2b1af7f3a8