| 1508081 |
pesticide safety |
|
E.P.A. Seal |
| 1572660 |
herbicides (general) |
|
Students at Cal State Polytechnic University Pomona protest against herbicides by obscuring common road signs with dead plants. February 1997 |
| 1572652 |
planting stock |
|
Customer (Gerald Holmes) selecting a bedding plant from retail shelf. February 1997 |
| 1572654 |
planting stock |
|
Customer (Keith Mayberry) selecting a bedding plant from retail shelf. February 1997 |
| 1572653 |
planting stock |
|
Customer (Keith Mayberry) selecting a bedding plant from retail shelf. February 1997 |
| 1572648 |
pesticides |
|
Customer (Gerald Holmes) selecting a pesticide from retail shelf. February 1997 |
| 1572646 |
pesticides |
|
Customer (Keith Mayberry) selecting a pesticide from retail shelf. February 1997 |
| 1572642 |
pesticides |
|
Customer (Gerald Holmes) uses books at Home and Garden store to find the cause of garden problems. January 1997 |
| 1572644 |
pesticides |
|
Home and garden pesticides on retail shelf. February 1997 |
| 1572643 |
pesticides |
|
Shelf of pesticide products for the home and garden. January 1997 |
| 1572493 |
irrigation |
|
December 1996 |
| 5375254 |
fertilization |
|
Limestone is often used to enhance fertilization effectiveness and promote soil pH. |
| 5365506 |
pesticides |
|
Display of two forms of pesticides. |
| 1511095 |
pesticide safety |
|
Art - "Read the label" |
| 1512003 |
pesticide safety |
|
Building signing (including "POISON") |
| 1512004 |
pesticide safety |
|
Label with "Poison" have specific meaning |
| 1512005 |
pesticide safety |
|
Revised building sign (NO "POISON") |
| 0976043 |
seed orchard/seed production areas |
|
interpretive sign at Target Meadows Seed Production Area; Walla Walla District |
| 0010033 |
lifting, grading, & storage |
|
Grading standards are determined by the customer, depending on their intended use. Larger seedlings are needed for moist planting sites where planting competition is severe, or on sites where animal damage is serious. Shorter, stockier seedlings with a proportionally larger root system are required for harsher, drier planting sites. Often, the nursery manager negotiates these standards with the customer when the seedling order is taken. Grading standards usually consist of a range of acceptable shoot heights, a minimum acceptable caliper (stem diameter), and the length and fibrosity of the root system. Of course, the seed code for the specific seed lot is also carefully monitored during the grading process. |