Juliet Notes: Based on observations in 2008 & 2009

Document 108

Title: Juliet Notes: Based on observations in 2008 & 2009

Source URL: https://research-groups.usask.ca/fruit/documents/cherrys/Juliet-notes.pdf

Archive provenance: discovery_round_01 curated pdf import | institution=University of Saskatchewan Fruit Program | source_root=https://research-groups.usask.ca | local_archive=/usr/local/var/www/pomologica/data/raw/manual/ingest_queue/discovery_round_01_second_corpus/Juliet-notes.pdf

Type: pdf | Language: en | Rights: unknown

Aliases: 1 | Provenance events: 2 | Evidence claims: 71

Open profile JSON | Open citation JSON

Document Metadata

Institution: University of Saskatchewan Fruit Program

Publisher:

Site:

Year:

Page count:

Type: cultivar observation notes

Metadata source: intake_manifest_v1

Document Assessment

# Document Assessment

This document looks useful, but only parts of it appear to be strong cultivar pages. It still contains cultivar-bearing pages, but they are mostly mixed narrative pages rather than clean directory or table layouts.

The title suggests a summary or notes document rather than a formal release bulletin.

Continue focusing on the likely cultivar pages rather than spending tokens on the whole document.

Relationship Records

IDRelationSourceTargetSource Doc
No catalog relationships linked to this document.

History Records

IDTypeYearLabel
756year_reference2004Year reference 2004
759release_event2004Release event 2004
757year_reference2006Year reference 2006
754year_reference2008Year reference 2008
758cross_event2008usually 4o Bri x higher than Carmine Jewel but that
755year_reference2009Year reference 2009

Document Reader

Reviewable cultivar from this document:

This selector is limited to cultivars that already have staging pages. Additional parsed names stay in the linked records table below.

Parsed Cultivar Detail

Cultivar: Juliet

Pages in document: p1 p2 p3

Entry Snippets

PageBasisSnippet
1introduction_sentence‘Juliet’ (sometimes erroneously spelled as Juliette) was originally released using its breeding number 7-21-32.0
2introduction_sentenceIt is hard to beat Juliet for optimum fruit size and quality.
3explicit_cultivar_referenceFigure 3. Juliet bushes in their 5th Year with technician Pete Reimer at the Uof SK.

Raw Parsed Claims

PageTypeClaimConfidence
1description_snippetJuliet was sometimes erroneously spelled as Juliette.0.99
1selection_origin_referenceJuliet was originally released under breeding number 7-21-32.0.0.99
1anecdote_snippetOne propagator temporarily and unauthorizedly called Juliet 'Bob'.0.97
1release_year_referenceJuliet was released in 2004.0.99
1description_snippetJuliet was formally renamed Juliet in 2006.0.98
1taxon_contextJuliet is part of the Romance Series.0.98
1productivityIn the 2004 planting of Romance cherries and Carmine Jewel, most trees began fruiting in 2008; by 2009 Juliet had similar yields to Valentine and Carmine Jewel and was coming close to full production.0.94
1entry_hardiness_observationThe winter of 2008/2009 caused no damage to Juliet bushes.0.98
1entry_hardiness_observationJuliet went into full bloom 3 days before all the other varieties.0.97
1entry_hardiness_observationJuliet bloom was very even across all branches and all trees, which further indicated good winter hardiness.0.95
1entry_hardiness_observationEarlier bloom may carry some risk if a late frost occurs.0.91
1caption_contextFigure 1 shows Juliet flowers.0.99
1caption_contextFigure 2 shows fully ripe Juliet fruit.0.99
2fruit_sizeJuliet is described as having optimum fruit size, defined here as the largest fruit size that can easily fit into a commercial cherry pitter.0.98
2fruit_colorJuliet fruit color is described as a deep burgundy red, though not as intense as Carmine Jewel.0.96
2flavor_profileJuliet is described as either the sweetest cherry or a close second to Crimson Passion over ten years of observation.0.97
2description_snippetJuliet varies from 18 to 24 degrees Brix, with lower values in wet years and higher values in drought years.0.98
2description_snippetJuliet is usually about 4 degrees Brix higher than Carmine Jewel.0.96
2description_snippetLonger ripening is presented as part of the reason Juliet can build more sugars, and cooler late-summer nights are said to help sugar accumulation.0.9
2flavor_profileWhen fruits dehydrate and look like raisins, they are described as even sweeter.0.92
2flavor_profileJuliet has often been called the best flavoured cherry by visitors when eaten right off the tree.0.96
2flavor_profileThe author personally rates Juliet close behind Crimson Passion for fresh eating.0.87
2culinary_useThe page states that taste comparisons of processed cherry products had not been done.0.94
2culinary_useSome growers suggested Juliet might be too sweet for processing, but two master gardeners considered it rather tart and said it would be fine for processing.0.95
2growth_habitJuliet's bush is described as sturdier than Carmine Jewel.0.9
2recommendation_contextJuliet may need pruning in future years to remain adapted for mechanization.0.9
2productivityAmechanical harvester named Joanna harvested Juliet nicely.0.94
2anecdote_snippetThe page remarks that all of the cherries continue to increase in sugar levels the longer they are left on the bush.0.89
3caption_contextJuliet bushes are shown in their fifth year with technician Pete Reimer at the University of Saskatchewan.0.99
3entry_locationAphotographed Juliet planting is located at the University of Saskatchewan.0.98
3growth_habitThe fifth-year Juliet plants are depicted as multi-stemmed bushes in an orchard or trial planting.0.86
3caption_contextSix-year-old Juliet bushes are shown at Bruno, Saskatchewan; the fruit is unripe, making it easy to see in the picture.0.99
3entry_locationAsix-year-old Juliet bush planting is documented at Bruno, Saskatchewan.0.99
3description_snippetThe page visually documents Juliet bushes carrying visible unripe fruit in a Saskatchewan field planting.0.9

Inherited Context

  • p1: cherry (Prunus) | Romance Series cherries | Juliet Notes | Productivity | Flowers and Cold hardiness | University of Saskatchewan fruit research context | Romance Series cherry breeding/release context | Saskatchewan, Canada
  • p2: cherry | Prunus | Romance Series cherries | Fruit Size and Quality | Flavour | University of Saskatchewan fruit program | University of Saskatchewan cherry breeding program | Saskatchewan, Canada
  • p3: cherry | Prunus | Romance Series cherries | Juliet Notes | Figures | University of Saskatchewan fruit program | University of Saskatchewan fruit breeding program | Saskatchewan | University of Saskatchewan | Bruno, Saskatchewan

Cultivar Citation Focus: This reader is filtered to citation evidence linked to Juliet (ID 312) within document 108. Use the rows below to jump the PDF directly to relevant passages.

Citation focus: cultivar focus: Juliet (ID 312) | page focus: 2

Choose a citation row to jump the PDF view. The `focus` term is sent to browser PDF search where supported.

PageTypeQuoteClaimEntityJump
1description_snippet‘Juliet’ (sometimes erroneously spelled as Juliette) was originally released using its breeding number 7-21-32.0Juliet was sometimes erroneously spelled as Juliette.cultivar 312Open Review parse
1selection_origin_reference‘Juliet’ (sometimes erroneously spelled as Juliette) was originally released using its breeding number 7-21-32.0Juliet was originally released under breeding number 7-21-32.0.cultivar 312Open Review parse
1anecdote_snippet‘Juliet’ (sometimes erroneously spelled as Juliette) was originally released using its breeding number 7-21-32.0One propagator temporarily and unauthorizedly called Juliet 'Bob'.cultivar 312Open Review parse
1release_year_reference‘Juliet’ (sometimes erroneously spelled as Juliette) was originally released using its breeding number 7-21-32.0Juliet was released in 2004.cultivar 312Open Review parse
1taxon_context‘Juliet’ (sometimes erroneously spelled as Juliette) was originally released using its breeding number 7-21-32.0Juliet is part of the Romance Series.cultivar 312Open Review parse
1productivity‘Juliet’ (sometimes erroneously spelled as Juliette) was originally released using its breeding number 7-21-32.0In the 2004 planting of Romance cherries and Carmine Jewel, most trees began fruiting in 2008; by 2009 Juliet had similar yields to Valentincultivar 312Open Review parse
1entry_hardiness_observation‘Juliet’ (sometimes erroneously spelled as Juliette) was originally released using its breeding number 7-21-32.0The winter of 2008/2009 caused no damage to Juliet bushes.cultivar 312Open Review parse
1caption_context‘Juliet’ (sometimes erroneously spelled as Juliette) was originally released using its breeding number 7-21-32.0Figure 1 shows Juliet flowers.cultivar 312Open Review parse
2fruit_sizeIt is hard to beat Juliet for optimum fruit size and quality.Juliet is described as having optimum fruit size, defined here as the largest fruit size that can easily fit into a commercial cherry pittercultivar 312Open Review parse
2fruit_colorIt is hard to beat Juliet for optimum fruit size and quality.Juliet fruit color is described as a deep burgundy red, though not as intense as Carmine Jewel.cultivar 312Open Review parse
2flavor_profileIt is hard to beat Juliet for optimum fruit size and quality.Juliet is described as either the sweetest cherry or a close second to Crimson Passion over ten years of observation.cultivar 312Open Review parse
2description_snippetIt is hard to beat Juliet for optimum fruit size and quality.Juliet varies from 18 to 24 degrees Brix, with lower values in wet years and higher values in drought years.cultivar 312Open Review parse
2culinary_useIt is hard to beat Juliet for optimum fruit size and quality.The page states that taste comparisons of processed cherry products had not been done.cultivar 312Open Review parse
2growth_habitIt is hard to beat Juliet for optimum fruit size and quality.Juliet's bush is described as sturdier than Carmine Jewel.cultivar 312Open Review parse
2recommendation_contextIt is hard to beat Juliet for optimum fruit size and quality.Juliet may need pruning in future years to remain adapted for mechanization.cultivar 312Open Review parse
2productivityIt is hard to beat Juliet for optimum fruit size and quality.Amechanical harvester named Joanna harvested Juliet nicely.cultivar 312Open Review parse
2anecdote_snippetIt is hard to beat Juliet for optimum fruit size and quality.The page remarks that all of the cherries continue to increase in sugar levels the longer they are left on the bush.cultivar 312Open Review parse
3caption_contextFigure 3. Juliet bushes in their 5th Year with technician Pete Reimer at the Uof SK.Juliet bushes are shown in their fifth year with technician Pete Reimer at the University of Saskatchewan.cultivar 312Open Review parse
3entry_locationFigure 3. Juliet bushes in their 5th Year with technician Pete Reimer at the Uof SK.Aphotographed Juliet planting is located at the University of Saskatchewan.cultivar 312Open Review parse
3growth_habitFigure 3. Juliet bushes in their 5th Year with technician Pete Reimer at the Uof SK.The fifth-year Juliet plants are depicted as multi-stemmed bushes in an orchard or trial planting.cultivar 312Open Review parse
3description_snippetFigure 3. Juliet bushes in their 5th Year with technician Pete Reimer at the Uof SK.The page visually documents Juliet bushes carrying visible unripe fruit in a Saskatchewan field planting.cultivar 312Open Review parse

Open PDF directly

Embedded viewer uses the local archived PDF directly for more reliable rendering.

Linked Cultivars

IDCultivarEvidence / ClaimsRelationshipsHistory / PagesLink
312Juliet3400Open cultivar
308Carmine Jewel600Open cultivar
310Romeo300Open cultivar
311Crimson Passion300Open cultivar
313Valentine300Open cultivar
309Evans200Open cultivar
170Montmorency100Open cultivar
314Cupid100Open cultivar

Document-Linked Records

Relationships: 0

History events: 6

These are the structured records currently tied to this document. They should line up with the document’s main cultivar story.

Rights Records

StatusLicenseHolder
unknown

Credibility Records

TierScoreAssessorRationale
tier_355autoUnclassified domain; requires manual source evaluation

Translation Records

Source LangTarget LangMethodStatusNote
No translation records.

Translation Quality Assessments

Translation IDScoreRiskAssessorRationale
No translation assessments.

Publication Records

StatusVisibilityReviewerNote
No publication records.

Extracted Entities

TypeValueConfidence
taxon_keywordprunus0.65

Extracted Claims

TypeClaimConfidence
description_snippetThey pointed out that when you first pop a cherry into your mouth you quickly taste the sweetness, but that if you eat several of the same variety of cherry in a row that the tartn0.54
description_snippetTwo master gardeners who were assisting with fruit evaluations surprised me when they insisted Juliet was rather tart and they disagreed with the concept of being ‘too sweet’.0.54
description_snippetSome growers have suggested that Juliet might be ‘too sweet’ to be good for processing.0.54
description_snippetBut we have not done taste comparisons between our cherries when used in processed products.0.54
description_snippetPersonally, I like Crimson Passion the most but that’s because CP has firmness reminiscent of a sweet cherry.0.54
productivityProductivity0.56
ripening_windowripen its fruit the longer there is potential for it to0.56
ripening_windowripening variety like CJ0.56
ripening_windowripening tends to swell the0.56
storage_durationkeep it adapted for0.56
flavor_profiletaste the0.57
flavor_profiletaste comparisons between0.57
release_year_reference20040.68
breeding_crossusually 4o Bri x higher than Carmine Jewel but that0.65
year_reference20060.55
year_reference20040.55
year_reference20090.55
year_reference20080.55