The American Gardener's Assistant: In Three Parts. Containing Complete Practical Directions for the Cultivation of Vegetables, Flowers, Fruit Trees, and Grape-vinesPorter & Coates, 1866 - 532 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-5 av 77
Side 47
... September , the plants will survive an ordinary winter , and produce top - shoots or sprouts early ; but it is best sown as soon as the ground is susceptible of cultivation in the spring . The sprouts should be cut while young , as such ...
... September , the plants will survive an ordinary winter , and produce top - shoots or sprouts early ; but it is best sown as soon as the ground is susceptible of cultivation in the spring . The sprouts should be cut while young , as such ...
Side 49
... September and in October . The other kinds will produce heads in regular succession through- out the winter and spring months , according to their different degrees of earliness , if an artificial climate be provided for them . These ...
... September and in October . The other kinds will produce heads in regular succession through- out the winter and spring months , according to their different degrees of earliness , if an artificial climate be provided for them . These ...
Side 50
... Cauliflower , the seed should be sow between the sixteenth and twenty - fourth of September , in a bed of clean , rich earth . In about four or five weeks after- wards , the plants should be pricked out into another 50 KITCHEN - GARDENING .
... Cauliflower , the seed should be sow between the sixteenth and twenty - fourth of September , in a bed of clean , rich earth . In about four or five weeks after- wards , the plants should be pricked out into another 50 KITCHEN - GARDENING .
Side 53
... September , pricked out and managed the same as Cauliflower plants , only that they are more hardy , and may sometimes be kept through the winter without sashes . Some prefer sowing the seed in a cold - bed , covered by a garden frame ...
... September , pricked out and managed the same as Cauliflower plants , only that they are more hardy , and may sometimes be kept through the winter without sashes . Some prefer sowing the seed in a cold - bed , covered by a garden frame ...
Side 66
... September . Some gardeners sow the seed in beds four or five feet wide , with paths between each bed , just sufficient to admit of room for hand - weeding ; but it will vegetate more freely if sown in drills half an inch deep , provided ...
... September . Some gardeners sow the seed in beds four or five feet wide , with paths between each bed , just sufficient to admit of room for hand - weeding ; but it will vegetate more freely if sown in drills half an inch deep , provided ...
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
The American Gardener's Assistant: In Three Parts, Containing Complete ... Thomas Bridgeman Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1867 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
acid apple Apricot Asparagus August autumn bark bearer beautiful beds berries Beurré biennial plant bloom blossoms branches bright buds bulbs Bunches Cauliflower Celery Chasselas color compost covered crimson crop cultivated delicious double flowers drills dwarf early earth espaliers excellent feet flavor flesh firm flesh white flesh yellow flowers fruit Fruit large Fruit of medium fruit-trees garden grafting green green-house ground grow growth half-hardy plants hardy heat hotbed inches deep insects juice juicy July kinds leaf-buds leaves light manure Muscadine native Nectarine oblong October orange oval Peach Pear perennial plants Pippin plants Plum pots produce propagated pruning purple raised rich ripe ripens roots roundish rows russet scarlet scion Sea-Kale season seed Seedling September shoots shrub soil sowing sown species spring stem sweet tender thin transplanted tree tuberous roots Turnips varieties vascular tissue vegetable vines warm weather winter wood yellowish young
Populære avsnitt
Side 136 - ... condition, as almost to insure a good crop of barley and a kind plant of clover, and that this clover is found a most excellent preparative for wheat, it will appear that the subsequent advantages derived from a crop of turnips must infinitely exceed its estimated value as fodder for cattle.
Side 25 - 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 9 - Awake : the morning shines, and the fresh field Calls us ; we lose the prime, to mark how spring Our tended plants, how blows the citron grove. What drops the myrrh, and what the balmy reed, How Nature paints her colours, how the bee Sits on the bloom, extracting liquid sweet.
Side 28 - It seems that cross fertilisation will not take place at all, or very rarely, between different species, unless these species are nearly related to each other ; and that the offspring of the two distinct species is itself sterile, or if it possesses the power of multiplying itself by seed, its progeny returns back to the state of one or other of its parents.
Side 136 - Researches,' estimated the value of the turnip crop annually grown in this country at fourteen millions ; but when we further recollect that it enables the agriculturist to reclaim and cultivate land which, without its aid, would remain in a hopeless state of natural barrenness ; that it leaves the land...
Side 20 - 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 and the mode of preparing some descriptions of stocks, the following hints...
Side 10 - Nor is the violet last in this shining embassy of the year which with all the embellishments that would grace...
Side 21 - ... formed ; perfect success is the more certain when this is the case. The scion is now to be carefully inserted, so that the inner bark of the scion and of the stock may both exactly meet. Large stocks require two scions, one on each side ; sometimes four are inserted.
Side 27 - In sowing seeds for the purpose of procuring improved varieties, care should be had not only that the seeds be taken from the finest existing kinds, but also that the most handsome, the largest, and the most perfectly ripened specimens should be those that supply the seed. A seedling plant will always partake more or less of the character of its parent, the qualities of which are concentrated in the embryo when it has arrived at full maturity. How this concentration takes place, we are as ignorant...