... in England. The cultivation of the Arracacha requires a deep black mould, that will easily yield to the descent of its large vertical roots. The mode of propagating it is to cut the root into pieces, each having an eye or shoot, and to plant these... Annals of Botany - Page 395publié par - 1806Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| 1824 - 884 pages
...cut the root into pieces, each having an eye or shoot, and to plant these in separate holes. After three or four months, the roots are of sufficient...for culinary purposes ; but if suffered to remain for six months in the ground, they will often acquire an immense size, without any detriment to their... | |
| 1823 - 466 pages
...to cut the root into pieces, each having an eye or shoot, and to plant these in separate holes. In three or four months the roots are of sufficient size...for culinary purposes ; but if suffered to remain in the ground for six months, they will often acquire an immense size, without any detriment to their... | |
| Thomas Campbell, Samuel Carter Hall, Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton, Theodore Edward Hook, Thomas Hood, William Harrison Ainsworth, William Ainsworth - 1823 - 614 pages
...cut the root into pieces, each having an eye or shoot, and to plant these in separate holes. After three or four months, the roots are of sufficient...for culinary purposes ; but if suffered to remain for six months in the ground, they will often acquire an immense size, without any detriment to their... | |
| 1824 - 890 pages
...cut the root into pieces, each having an eye or shoot, and to plant these in separate holes. After three or four months, the roots are of sufficient...for culinary purposes ; but if suffered to remain for six months in the ground, they will often acquire an immense size, without any detriment to their... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1824 - 894 pages
...cut the root into pieces, each having an eye or shoot, and to plant these in separate holes. After three or four months, the roots are of sufficient...for culinary purposes ; but if suffered to remain for six months in the ground, they will often acquire ah immense size, without stay detriment to their... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1824 - 918 pages
...cut the root into pieces, each having an eye or shoot, and to plant these in separate holes. After three or four months, the roots are of sufficient...for culinary purposes ; but if suffered to remain for six months in the ground, they will often acquire an immense size, without any detriment to their... | |
| 1824 - 726 pages
...to pieces, each having a separate eye or shoot, and planting these in separate holes. At the end of three or four months, the roots are of sufficient size and quantity to be used for ordinary purposes, and if allowed to remain in the ground for six months, they increase to a great... | |
| Perry Fairfax Nursey - 1824 - 470 pages
...to pieces, each having a separate eye or shoot, and planting these in separate holes. At the end of three or four months, the roots are of sufficient size and quantity tu be used for ordinary purposes, and if allowed to remain in the ground for six months, they increase... | |
| 1834 - 498 pages
...eye or shoot, and to plant these in separate holes. After three or four months, the roots are of a sufficient size and quantity to be used for culinary purposes ; but if suffered to remain for six months in the ground, they will often acquire an immense size, without any detriment to their... | |
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