$19.99
| /
A true slice of mid-century farm knowledge: this 1960 Fruit Spraying Calendar is a Michigan State University Cooperative Extension bulletin made for orchardists who needed practical, timed schedules—not guesswork.
Inside, you’ll find crop-by-crop guidance (apples, cherries, plums and more), plus sections on insecticides, fungicides, and “concentrate spraying” calculations. It’s the kind of vintage agricultural ephemera that reads like a working notebook from the era.
Photo-verified details and condition notes below—ready for your shelf, studio, or collection.
Notes: Cover shows noticeable age wear: tanning, scattered stains/spotting, edge wear, and a creased/turned corner (top right) visible in photos. Binding is staple-bound; staples present. Interior pages look readable with expected toning for age; includes tables and schedules throughout.
Condition Grade Key
Near Fine: minimal wear; tight; clean.
Very Good: light wear; clean text; minor flaws.
Good: noticeable wear; sound reading copy; some marks.
Fair: heavy wear; complete but worn; priced accordingly.
This bulletin was produced by Michigan State University’s Cooperative Extension specialists—practical researchers writing for working growers who needed field-ready schedules and pesticide timing guidance.
A neat, niche piece of orchard history—perfect for the gardener who loves vintage how-to paperbacks and real-world ephemera.
Shelf-worthy vintage finds you can trust. Find Your Story.
∙Photo-verified condition (no surprises)
∙Packed with our protective packaging standard
∙Ships in 1 business day
∙Free Shipping on $35+ (U.S. only)
The vintage items I share with you have been previously owned and loved and may show some wear. Please use the pictures as a guide. While I do my best to capture colors accurately, your monitor or device screen may display colors slightly differently from the actual item.
Care & Handling: Handle with clean, dry hands. Store upright, out of direct sunlight, at about 68°F and 40–50% relative humidity. Avoid damp areas and extreme temperature swings. Please note: If you have any questions or need more photos, ask.