No image available
No image available
· 1990
A medium size hybrid chestnut tree, having an upright and widely spreading form and glossy dark green foliage with prolific, sweet scented flowers appearing after leaf out in spring; the tree being a regular and very productive bearer of extremely large, chocolate brown, very sweet and easy-to-peel nuts, the nuts ripening and falling free from the burrs in mid-September; the tree also displaying a high genetic resistance to the chestnut bark blight (Endothia parasitica), being bred from the same line of hybrid chestnut trees as the Revival Chestnut (U.S. Plant Pat. No. 5,537), the Heritage Chestnut (U.S. Plant Pat. No. 6,574), and the Carolina Chestnut (U.S. Plant Pat. No. 7,041), the present variety itself not showing any instance of blight infection in 12 years of growth in the orchard.
No image available
· 2006
For the first time ever in the history of man, science has discovered that the whole universe had a beginning from an immense explosion about 15 billion years ago. The evidence is overwhelming and irrefutable. The monumental, disquieting question raised is, "Who started it?" It certainly didn't start itself, at a whim from the non-existent. Why is this pertinent to the search for the real inside story about Christians? The answer is that all is based on biblical principles, and this mind-boggling discovery almost single-handedly establishes the God of the Bible and His word therein as an immutable truth for all mankind. Other cosmic parameter discoveries, and even scientific support for actual biblical quotations, buttress these findings and clinch the God of the Bible as the Creator of this universe. From this solid base, the real inside story about Christians is then revealed.
No image available
No image available
· 1989
A tall, vigorous hybrid chestnut tree with very American chestnut-like characteristics, having a single, timber-form, upright, straight bole and a narrow branching habit, with large, elliptical and deeply dentate leaves and strongly scented flowers appearing in late spring after leafing out; the tree being a regular and light bearer of medium-sized, elongated, sweet nuts, the burrs splitting and many of the nuts falling free from the burr; the tree also exhibiting a high genetic resistance to the chestnut bark blight (Endothia parastitica), being a member of a group of hybrid chestnut trees that have not shown a single instance of infection in over 30 years of breeding and research, including passing inoculation tests without dying from infection, and the present variety itself not showing any instance of blight infection in 25 years of growth in the orchard.
No image available
· 1932
No image available
· 1989
A large, vigorous hybrid chestnut tree, having an upright growth form with broadly spreading branches and a rounded crown, and abundant, lustrous foliage of large elliptical leaves with slightly dentate margins, and stongly scented flowers appearing in spring after leafing out; the tree being a regular and very prolific bearer of large, dark colored and very sweet, easy-to-peel nuts, the nuts ripening and falling free from the burr in mid September to the first of October; the tree also exhibiting a very high inherent resistance to the chestnut bark blight (Endothia parasitica), not showing a single instance of blight infection in 15 years of growth in the orchard.
No image available
· 1932
No image available