California Avocado Society
1951 Yearbook
Volume 36

Table of Contents

  1. Foreword

  2. In Appreciation—C. H. Young
SECTION I
  1. Officers and Directors

  2. Awards of Honor

  3. Annual Report of the President
    Trask

  4. Financial Report

  5. Equipment Exhibits and Tour—1951 Annual Meeting (photos)

  6. Variety Receipts—Calavo Growers of California

  7. Variety Receipts—United Avocado Growers

  8. Report of the Avocado Variety Committee

  9. Avocado Variety Trials at Riverside
    Winslow

  10. Variety Catalog (supplement)

  11. Avocado Patents

  12. Report of the Sub-Committee on Rootstocks

  13. Report of the Committee on Foreign Exploration

  14. Report of the Research Committee

  15. Report of the Subtropical Fruit Varieties Committee
SECTION II
  1. Plant Patents

  2. The Principal Work of the Division of Sub-Tropical Horticulture on the Avocado
    Hodgson

  3. What We Can Do
    Coke

  4. The Avocado Picture in Ventura County
    Delphey

  5. Avocado Practices in Ventura County
    Goodall

  6. Avocado Practices in Santa Barbara County
    White

  7. Cold-Hardiness of Young Avocado Trees on Mexican and Guatemalan Rootstocks
    Halma and Smoyer

  8. Care of Little Trees
    Yarick

  9. Frost Protection of Young Avocado Trees
    Gustafson

  10. Frost Protection
    Murphy

  11. A Soil Map for Better Soil Management
    Trask

  12. Avocado Irrigation
    Moore

  13. Avocado Diseases
    Zentmyer

  14. Phytophthora Cinnamomi on Avocado in Honduras
    Zentmyer and Popenoe

  15. Avocado Diseases in Mexico and Costa Rica
    Zentmyer

  16. Resistance of Subtropical Plants to Phytophthora Cinnamomi
    Zentmyer and Schroeder

  17. Avocado Materials for Horticultural Research
    Schroeder

  18. Why Prune Avocado Trees
    Smoyer et al

  19. Rainfall Forecasting
    Baker

  20. Avocado Bibliography (supplement)

  21. The Macadamia or Queensland Nut
    Miller
SECTION III
  1. Rooting Guatemalan Avocado Cuttings
    Frolich

  2. Variations in the Composition of Avocado Seed
    Haas

  3. Relative Susceptibility of Avocado Rootstocks to Chlorosis
    Halma and White

  4. Research on Rootstocks Resistant to Avocado Root Rot
    Zentmyer and Schroeder

  5. Flower Bud Development in the Avocado
    Schroeder

  6. Influence of Glasshouse Conditions on Flower Behavior of Hass and Anaheim Avocados
    Bringhurst

  7. Environmental Conditions Affecting Pollination of Avocados
    Lesley and Bringhurst

  8. Sodium and Chloride Injury of Fuerte Avocado Leaves
    Ayers, Aldrich, and Coony

  9. The Occurrence and Effects of Cephalothecium Roseum on Avocado
    Yale and Johnstone
SECTION IV
  1. The Economic Feasibility of Planting Tip Grafted Avocado Trees
    Schnackenberg
SECTION V
  1. Roster of Members