The Midland florist and suburban horticulturist, conducted by J.F. WoodJohn Frederick Wood 1862 |
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Página 3
... months , when there are no leaves to intercept a perfect examination , and when , with a quick eye , a lad might almost insure the taking of every one . Those chrysalises would become so many flies or moths , whose business it would be ...
... months , when there are no leaves to intercept a perfect examination , and when , with a quick eye , a lad might almost insure the taking of every one . Those chrysalises would become so many flies or moths , whose business it would be ...
Página 9
... monthly works , of which we may claim this to be the leader ; and , while the ALMANAC is waiting another year before it can make its appearance , this work comes out fresh every month with matter equally important at the time . Strange ...
... monthly works , of which we may claim this to be the leader ; and , while the ALMANAC is waiting another year before it can make its appearance , this work comes out fresh every month with matter equally important at the time . Strange ...
Página 11
... monthly meeting of gardeners to discuss modes of practice and further mutual interests may be good . If your employer has strange whims and fancies , humour them . If he has unreasonable expectations , let them correct themselves . Mind ...
... monthly meeting of gardeners to discuss modes of practice and further mutual interests may be good . If your employer has strange whims and fancies , humour them . If he has unreasonable expectations , let them correct themselves . Mind ...
Página 13
... months before a winter usually commences . When common Anemones are raised for mixtures , the roots of which are to be sold by weight for common border flowers , little else is done than to rake a border or bed even , rub the seed out ...
... months before a winter usually commences . When common Anemones are raised for mixtures , the roots of which are to be sold by weight for common border flowers , little else is done than to rake a border or bed even , rub the seed out ...
Página 14
... month of October the same care must be taken to keep them separate , to keep the blooming ones six inches apart , and those that are too small to flower three inches apart . You will shortly find you have a good stock of the varieties ...
... month of October the same care must be taken to keep them separate , to keep the blooming ones six inches apart , and those that are too small to flower three inches apart . You will shortly find you have a good stock of the varieties ...
Términos y frases comunes
1st prize amateurs ammonia Auricula Azaleas beautiful better bloom border bottom branches Bridgwood bulbs charcoal Class colour compost conservatory Countess Cowper covered crops cultivation Dahlias double drain dung early exhibited fancy feet floriculture florists flowers foliage frost fruit Fulham gardener give glass graft green greenhouse ground grow growers grown growth half heat Horticultural Society Hovea hundred inches John Morris keep kinds leaves loam Lord Derby manure Messrs moisture month never nursery nurserymen object peat Pelargoniums petals plants plum pots produce pruning removed require Richard Prescott roots Roses rotted Royal Horticultural Society season seed seed saved seedlings seen shade shoots side single soil soon sort sowing sown species spring stem stove things tree Tulips varieties vegetable weather winter wood write yellow
Pasajes populares
Página 33 - And Reuben went in the days of wheat harvest, and found mandrakes in the field, and brought them unto his mother Leah. Then Rachel said to Leah, Give me, I pray thee, of thy son's mandrakes.
Página 81 - And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength. This is the first commandment. And the second is like, namely this, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. There is none other commandment greater than these.
Página 106 - This brawl to-day, Grown to this faction, in the Temple garden, Shall send, between the red rose and the white, A thousand souls to death and deadly night.
Página 149 - Among his anecdotes of celebrated English oaks, we were surprised to find Mr. Loudon adopting (at least so we understand him) an apocryphal story about Herne's Oak, given in the lively pages of Mr. Jesse's Gleanings. That gentleman, if he had taken any trouble, might have ascertained that the tree in question was cut down one morning, by order of King George III., when in a state of great, but transient, excitement; the circumstance caused much regret and astonishment at the time, and was commented...
Página 148 - I commit ft to your especial charge ; and take care that no damage is ever done to it. I had rather that every tree in the park should be cut down, than that this tree should be hurt. This i$ Berne's Oak.
Página 103 - ... cultivated, or several removes from a wild state, though still a mazzard, the seedlings will show great variety of character. Once in the possession of a variety, which has moved out of the natural into a more domesticated form, we have in our hands the best material for the improving process. The fixed original habit of the species is broken in upon, and this variety which we have created, has always afterwards some tendency to make further departures from the original form.
Página 69 - Your long life spent in the most arduous studies, your unwearied application to improve mankind as well as your own country, very deservedly entitle you to the high honours so lately conferred on you. May you live long to enjoy them, with health of body and tranquillity of mind, is the ardent sincere wish of your affectionate friend, P. COLLINSON. PS It is now five years since my good friend told...
Página 149 - Herne the Hunter having blasted it, it appears to have suffered a premature decay within the last twenty years. This tree is of small girth compared with other trees about it. It is not more than fifteen feet in ciroumference at the largest part, while there is a magnificent oak at about two hundred yards distance, whose girth is nearly thirty feet.
Página 33 - I had not the pleasure," he says, " to see this plant in blossom, the fruit now hanging ripe to the stem, which lay withered on the ground; but I got several roots, which I found difficult to procure entire, as the inhabitants had no spades, but a kind of hoe, or ground axe; with this they cut up the earth, and hurt the root, which, in some plants, descended six and eight feet under ground.
Página 148 - Oak to be cut down. I have also the authority of one of the members of the present Royal Family for stating, that George III. always mentioned the tree now standing as Herne's Oak. King William III. was a great planter of avenues, and to him we are indebted for those in Hampton Court and Bushy Parks, and also those at Windsor. All these have been made in a straight line, with the exception of one in the Home Park, which diverges a little, so as to take in Herne's Oak as a part of the avenue — a...