Grosster Aprikosenpfirsich. 1. Dochnahl Führ. Obstkunde 3:220. 1858.
Flowers small, flesh-colored; fruit very large, roundish, lightly sutured; skin yellow, often without any red; flesh yellow to the stone, fine, sweet; clingstone; ripens at the end of August.
Grover Cleveland. 1. Wickson Cal. Fruits 314. 1889.
Grover Cleveland originated as a chance seedling with J. W. Gates, Vacaville, California. Tree hardy, prolific; fruit small, yellow, with a dark red cheek; flesh stained at the pit, firm; stone small, clinging; good for shipping and canning.
Grover Red. 1. Ill. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 188. 1881.
Grover Red is an early, white-fleshed freestone grown about Warsaw, Illinois.
Grubbs Cling. 1. N. Mex. Sta. Bul. 30:243. 1899.
Tested at the New Mexico Experiment Station.
Guadalupe. 1. U. S. D. A. Rpt. 263. 1892. 2. Tex. Sta. Bul. 39:805. 1896.
G. Onderdonk, Nursery, Texas, grew Guadalupe from a peach of the Spanish type. Glands reniform; fruit roundish-oblate, conical, small; suture deep; apex prominent; skin covered with a short, persistent down, thick, tough, dull creamy-white; flesh tinged at the stone, vinous, aromatic; quality very good; clingstone; ripens in August in southern Texas.