The Magazine of Horticulture, Botany, and All Useful Discoveries and Improvements in Rural Affairs, Volume 3Hovey and Company, 1837 |
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Pagina vii
... Apple , 352 ; Co- lossal Elm Tree at Brignoles , 430 . Belgium . - Grand Show of Plants at Ghent , in March last , 431 . DOMESTIC NOTICES . Culture of the Sugar Beet , Manufacture of Silk and Cotton , 113 ; The double Ayrshire Rose ...
... Apple , 352 ; Co- lossal Elm Tree at Brignoles , 430 . Belgium . - Grand Show of Plants at Ghent , in March last , 431 . DOMESTIC NOTICES . Culture of the Sugar Beet , Manufacture of Silk and Cotton , 113 ; The double Ayrshire Rose ...
Pagina 8
... apple , our climate has been found so peculiarly well adapted , as to lead to a considerable production and export for foreign market . In kitchen gardening nearly all the best vegetables are cultivated , though many of the more ...
... apple , our climate has been found so peculiarly well adapted , as to lead to a considerable production and export for foreign market . In kitchen gardening nearly all the best vegetables are cultivated , though many of the more ...
Pagina 14
... apple tree , and attains a large size before bearing fruit . It cannot be called a first rate fruit , many pears , ripening at the same time , being superior to it . Coxe no doubt describes this pear erroneously , as the Red Bergamot ...
... apple tree , and attains a large size before bearing fruit . It cannot be called a first rate fruit , many pears , ripening at the same time , being superior to it . Coxe no doubt describes this pear erroneously , as the Red Bergamot ...
Pagina 31
... apple , Jambòsa vulgàris , and another of the double white camellia , all of which were more than eight feet high , occupying the centre of this bed , and attracted our admiration . We noticed a number of fine camellias , of which a few ...
... apple , Jambòsa vulgàris , and another of the double white camellia , all of which were more than eight feet high , occupying the centre of this bed , and attracted our admiration . We noticed a number of fine camellias , of which a few ...
Pagina 36
... apple tree , of a very large size , whose branches are covered with a profusion of lichens of two species , viz . Usnea flórida and barbata . Not a twig of its spray which is not enveloped in this singular drapery of cryptogamus ...
... apple tree , of a very large size , whose branches are covered with a profusion of lichens of two species , viz . Usnea flórida and barbata . Not a twig of its spray which is not enveloped in this singular drapery of cryptogamus ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
The Magazine of Horticulture, Botany, and All Useful Discoveries ..., Volume 25 Volledige weergave - 1859 |
The Magazine of Horticulture, Botany, and All Useful Discoveries ..., Volume 24 Volledige weergave - 1858 |
The Magazine of Horticulture, Botany, and All Useful Discoveries ..., Volume 25 Volledige weergave - 1859 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
abundant amateurs appearing apples azaleas barrel beautiful beds beurré bloom blossoms Boston Botanical bouquets branches buds bulbs bunch bushel Cabbages camellias collection color conservatory crop cultivation dahlias DICOTYLEDONOUS early elegant England epiphyte excellent exhibited feet high Floricultural florists flowers foliage fruit garden genus geraniums grafted grapery grapes green-house plants growing grown growth habit half peck handsome hardy herbaceous Horticultural Society III.-NO inches June kinds late leaves Lindl Lindley loam Loddiges London Horticultural Society Magazine Marchioness of Tavistock Massachusetts Horticultural Society Medal Messrs month native Noisette noticed nursery ornamental pears peat perennial plant perfection petals pots pound produced propagated purple racemes remarks Rhododendron ripened roots roses scarcely scarlet season seedling shrubs soil sorts species specimens splendid stove sweet tion trees umbels varieties vegetable vicinity vines warratah winter yellow
Populaire passages
Pagina 272 - Instead of the thorn shall come up the fir-tree, and instead of the brier shall come up the myrtle-tree: and it shall be to the Lord for a name, for an everlasting sign that shall not be cut off.
Pagina 246 - English horticulturists can be produced in this country, and we hope the time is not far distant when we shall not be dependent upon England for new varieties.
Pagina 369 - Edwards's Botanical Register, or Ornamental Flower Garden and Shrubbery. Each number containing eight figures of Plants and Shrubs. In monthly numbers; 4s. colored, 3s.
Pagina 426 - The tree being felled, is cut into lengths of five or six feet. A part of the hard wood is then sliced off, and the workman, coming to the pith, cuts across the longitudinal fibres and the pith together, leaving a part at each end uncut, so that when it is excavated, there remains a trough, into which the pulp is again put, mixed with water, and beaten with a piece of wood. Then the fibres, separated from the pulp, float at top, and the flour subsides.
Pagina 61 - I do not expect a direct assent, neither do I wish it, for it should be taken with much reserve; but it is undoubtedly true." These considerations should stimulate us in searching after new varieties, equal, or perhaps superior, to those of •which we regret the loss.
Pagina 61 - AH the grafts taken from this first tree, or parent stock, or any of the descendants, will for some generations thrive; but when this first stock shall, by mere dint of old age, fall into actual decay, a nihility of vegetation, the descendants, however...
Pagina 272 - If, then, the time is predicted when swords shall be beaten into ploughshares, and spears into pruning-hooks, and men shall not learn the art of war any more, it follows that all who manufacture, sell or wield those deadly weapons, do thus array themselves against the peaceful dominion of the SON OF GOD on earth.
Pagina 226 - ... their leaf in the winter, in which case they suffer injury from severe frosts that may ensue, though they will endure a good deal ; and their habit is to flower after the leaf has acquired its growth before they go to rest. The Phycellas have been found difficult to cultivate, because they have been often set in peat, though they grow naturally in a sandy or strong soil on a dry rocky substratum, and proper rest has not been allowed them. They should be planted in light soil well drained, and...
Pagina 297 - This is a charming addition to the climbers cultivated in England ; it has a most graceful mode of growth, and the large violet flowers, with deep purple stamens, are more ornamental than those of any species of Clematis yet in this country.
Pagina 337 - About the 1st of February I stop all the young shoots, which soon become well ripened ; from this time I decrease the quantity of water until they become quite dry, in order to throw the plants into a state of rest In the beginning of March, I replace them in a cold shady situation in the greenhouse, treating...