A Treatise on the Culture and Management of Fruit Trees ...: To which is Added, a New and Improved Edition of "Observations on the Diseases, Defects and Injuries of All Kinds of Fruit and Forest Trees" ...Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green, 1824 - 523 sider |
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Side 11
... destroyed by frosts , cutting winds , & c . In severe weather , they ought to be covered before the flowers begin to expand ; for I have often seen the blossoms drop off before they opened . The best covering is old fish - nets , which ...
... destroyed by frosts , cutting winds , & c . In severe weather , they ought to be covered before the flowers begin to expand ; for I have often seen the blossoms drop off before they opened . The best covering is old fish - nets , which ...
Side 72
... destroyed as hereafter directed . Let the wall , with the stems and branches of the trees , be carefully inspected , and all the snails about them picked off and destroyed . The young snails frequently commit great depredations on the ...
... destroyed as hereafter directed . Let the wall , with the stems and branches of the trees , be carefully inspected , and all the snails about them picked off and destroyed . The young snails frequently commit great depredations on the ...
Side 73
... destroyed . In February following , I had the wall well washed with soap and urine mixed , as also the stems and branches of the trees . ( This must be done before the buds begin to open , and in the fore - part of the day , that the ...
... destroyed . In February following , I had the wall well washed with soap and urine mixed , as also the stems and branches of the trees . ( This must be done before the buds begin to open , and in the fore - part of the day , that the ...
Side 191
... destroyed by the canker ; some of them were so loaded with fruit the . following year , that I was obliged to prop the branches , to prevent their being broken down by the weight of it . In the fourth year after these standards were ...
... destroyed by the canker ; some of them were so loaded with fruit the . following year , that I was obliged to prop the branches , to prevent their being broken down by the weight of it . In the fourth year after these standards were ...
Side 220
... destroyed by birds and insects , and rotted by the wet . Although the above statement is within the bounds of truth , it may appear to the reader like an exaggeration ; but it is in the power of every one , who will follow the ...
... destroyed by birds and insects , and rotted by the wet . Although the above statement is within the bounds of truth , it may appear to the reader like an exaggeration ; but it is in the power of every one , who will follow the ...
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A Treatise on the Culture and Management of Fruit Trees ...: To which is ... William Forsyth Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1824 |
A Treatise on the Culture and Management of Fruit Trees ...: To Which Is ... William Forsyth, Jr. Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2015 |
A Treatise on the Culture and Management of Fruit Trees ...: To Which Is ... William Forsyth Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2019 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Apricots Aust Autumn baking bark bearer bearing Bergamot berries Black branches brown canker Cherry cion Coccus Colmar comes into eating Composition covered cultivated decayed Duham Espaliers et Turp flavour flesh is white Franc fruit garden grafting grape green grow handsome head Heref Hooker Pom Hort inches injured insects Ischia juice juicy keeps till March Kensington Kensington Gardens Knoop Pom Langley Pom latter end leaves Lond melting method middle mould Muscadine Nectarines observed October oval pale Peaches pear PIPPIN planted plum Poit prevent produce pruning red colour RENNET rich ripens the beginning ripens the end roots rotten round russet season September shaded side shape skin smooth soil sorts spots stalk stems stone streaked sugary Summer sweet trained trees Turp Vines wall weather WILLIAM FORSYTH Winter wood wounds yellow colour young
Populære avsnitt
Side 444 - That an humble address be presented to his Majesty, that he will be graciously pleased to give directions that a monument be erected in the Cathedral Church of ST.
Side 453 - OBSERVATIONS ON THE DISEASES, DEFECTS, AND INJURIES, | IN ALL KINDS OF FRUIT AND FOREST TREES." WITH AN ACCOUNT OF | A PARTICULAR METHOD OF CURE, | PUBLISHED BY ORDER OF GOVERNMENT.
Side iii - Observations on the Diseases, Defects, and Injuries in all Kinds of Fruit and Forest Trees ; with an Account of a particular Method of Cure.
Side 453 - The composition being thus made, care must be taken to prepare the tree properly for its application, by cutting away all the dead, decayed, and injured part, till you come to the fresh sound wood, leaving the surface of the wood very smooth, and rounding off the edges of the bark with a draw-knife, or other instrument, perfectly smooth, which must be particularly attended to...
Side 454 - ... that happens, to rub it over with the finger when occasion may require (which is best done when moistened by rain), that the plaster may be kept whole, to prevent the air and Wet penetrating into the wound.
Side 453 - ... and a sixteenth part of a bushel of pit or river sand : the three last articles are to be sifted fine before they are mixed ; then work them well together with a spade, and afterwards with a wooden beater, until the stuff is very smooth, like fine plaster used for ceilings of rooms.
Side 303 - GRAFTING. Grafting is the taking a shoot from one tree and inserting it into another in such a manner that both may unite closely and become one tree. These shoots are called scions or grafts, and in the choice of them...
Side 457 - ... being blown down by the wind. It will, therefore, be necessary to leave part of the dead wood, at first, to strengthen the tree, and to cut it out by degrees as the new wood is formed. If there be any canker, or gum oozing, the infected parts must be pared off, or cut out with a proper instrument.
Side 454 - ... mixed with a sixth part of the same quantity of the ashes of burnt bones ; put it into a tin box with holes in the top, and shake the powder on the surface of the plaster, till the whole is covered over with it, letting it remain for half an hour to absorb the moisture ; then apply more powder, rubbing it on gently with the hand, and repeating the application of the powder till the whole plaster becomes a dry smooth surface.
Side 312 - ... a slope, and a slit made the contrary way, in the top of the slope, deep enough to receive the...