![]() | 100 Years of Achievements in |
| Fifty years ago, fruit growers employed many makeshift methods for controlling insects. Some used whiskbrooms for applying sprays to small fruits. Others, like the man in the picture, dusted low growing plants (gooseberries) by using a coarse, mesh-cloth bag containing insecticidal dust. Click the BACK button on your browser to return to the picture set. |
Clemson University Cooperative Extension Service offers its programs to people of all ages, regardless of race, color, gender, religion, national origin, disability, political beliefs, sexual orientation, marital or family status and is an equal opportunity employer. Clemson University Cooperating with U.S. Department of Agriculture and South Carolina Counties, Extension Service, Clemson, S.C. Issued in Furtherance of Cooperative Extension Work in Agriculture and Home Economics, Acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914.
R.G. Bellinger, Extension Pesticide Coordinator, bbllngr@clemson.edu
Site maintained by Rachel Rowe | Pesticide
Information Program | Entomology Program
Entomology, Soils, & Plant Sciences Department | Cooperative
Extension Service
Clemson
University |
April 15, 2008
| Site
map