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History Of Mulberry Trees, 'Morus Alba,' 'Morus Rubrum,' And 'Morus Nigra'

Article Description:
====================

Mulberry trees were well known in the ancient civilizations of
the world. They were famous fruit trees, because of the delicious
berry fruits that were abundantly produced by fast growing
trees-loaded with huge green leaves that were eaten by livestock,
along with the berries, and the leaves were used in the Orient to
fatten silkworms for the silk trade.


Additional Article Information:
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870 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-02-23 14:00:00

Written By:     Patrick Malcolm
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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History Of Mulberry Trees, 'Morus Alba,' 'Morus Rubrum,' And 'Morus Nigra'
Copyright (c) 2007 Patrick Malcolm
Ty Ty Nursery
http://www.tytyga.com



Mulberry trees were well known in the ancient civilizations of
the world. They were famous fruit trees, because of the delicious
berry fruits that were abundantly produced by fast growing
trees-loaded with huge green leaves that were eaten by livestock,
along with the berries, and the leaves were used in the Orient to
fatten silkworms for the silk trade. General Oglethorpe, in 1733,
imported 500 white mulberry trees to Fort Frederica in Georgia to
encourage silk production at the English colony of Georgia.

William Bartram, the famous early American explorer and botanist,
described his encounter with mulberry trees near Mobile, Alabama,
in his book, Travels, in the year 1773.

Prince's Nursery in 1774 offered for sale 500 white mulberry
trees, 'Morus alba' and 1000 black mulberry trees, 'Morus
nigra,' at Flushing, New York. Documents show that America's
first President, George Washington, bought fruit from this
nursery.

Mulberry trees were planted in the landscape of President Thomas
Jefferson 20 feet apart, and the fruit trees lined both sides of
the road that extended around the house at Monticello, Virginia.

The silk trade was extremely important in the ancient
civilizations in exchanges of fabrics, rugs, etc. The caravans of
camels that traveled the "Silk Road" from Turkey to China
brought world civilizations in contact with many valuable
products back and forth to be traded, one of the most desirable
and important products was silk. The mulberry trees, 'Morus
alba,' were most desirable for silk production and gradually
were filtered from Oriental societies to European fields. Many of
these mulberry trees are grown today in Turkey, from where the
famous Turkish silk carpets are distributed throughout the
world.

Early Americans such as General Oglethorpe hoped to establish the
silk industry in the American debtor colonies, but the project
was destined for failure for many reasons. The mulberry trees are
very fast growing fruit trees, and many farmers in the United
States and other countries are hoping to profitably grow the
trees for the production of human and livestock food. The wood of
mulberry trees is very soft and is used for many purposes in many
nations, but not extensively in the United States.

The white mulberry, 'Morus alba,' with the extremely large crop
production of these trees has been observed growing as a fruit
tree in North Carolina according to researcher, Russell Smith, in
Tree Crops: A Permanent Agriculture that: white mulberry trees
planted by a farmer "who kept pigs and claimed that one-third
their weight was due to the mulberries falling from the
trees-about 625 pounds of pork to an acre on rather thin, sandy
land with little care and no cultivation." James A. Duke in
Handbook of Energy Crops sees the mulberry fruit as a source of
energy, "in South Korea on producing high yields of ethanol from
mulberry trees."

Mulberry trees are considered to be a very important fruit tree
in gardens of the Orient, Europe and the Mideast, and since new
hybrid cultivars have been developed recently, the demand for
these trees has surged in the U.S., where the grafted trees are
rare, expensive and difficult to obtain. New cultivars are
adaptable throughout the U.S. except Southern Florida, California
and Arizona, and some trees offer stainless fruit, early bearing,
rapid growth and delicious berry quality on berries that dangle
from the stems, some tasting sweet as honey. These syrupy sweet
mulberries are used in Ice Cream, jams, jellies, beverages, pies,
and as stuffing mixtures for game birds.

The fast growing mulberry tree can grow as much as 10ft in one
year, and as a rule will bear a few berries the first year, some
with the richness of sweet cherries. The berries ripen to a
brilliant black color, or red, pink, or white and are delectably
fragrantly sweet and about two inches long, like a cooling blend
and taste of raspberry and strawberry. The mulberry is excellent
for fresh eating and for cooking pies. Some mulberries when dead
ripe are so soft that just picking them breaks the fragile skin,
staining your fingers purple with juice. This means that as a
commercial berry available from grocery shelves, forget it, but
nevertheless: the mulberries only need to travel as far as your
mouth.

This choice mulberry fruit is practically seedless with a crisp,
sweet flavor when eaten directly from the tree. Every child in
your neighborhood will learn when the berries from this
outstanding tree are ripening in early May. Most cultivars of
hybrid mulberry trees are well adapted in most areas of the
United States.

The dessert quality berries are excellent and honey sweet for
picking directly off the tree and contain high concentrations of
fruity sugar that makes the berries useful to process for jams,
jellies and pies. The mature height of mulberry trees is 30
feet.

New grafted cultivars of mulberry trees are gaining lots of
attention from the backyard gardener. Some of the recommended new
cultivars of mulberry fruit trees are White Mulberry, 'Morus
alba' 'Whitey;' Superberry Mulberry, 'Morus nigra'
'Superberry;' Black Beauty Mulberry, 'Morus nigra' 'Black
Beauty' plant patent 4913; Pakistan Mulberry, 'Morus rubra'
'Pakistan;' Persian Mulberry, 'Morus nigra' 'Shah;' Bachuus
Noir Mulberry, 'Morus nigra' 'Bachuus Noir;' and the Red
Gelato Mulberry, 'Morus rubrum' 'Red Gelato.'




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Written by: Patrick Malcolm. Learn more about various trees 
by visiting the author's website: http://www.tytyga.com


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