The Gardener's Magazine and Register of Rural and Domestic Improvement, Volume 2John Claudius Loudon Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green, 1827 |
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Page 5
... ( Gard . Mag . p . 401. ) as to whether salt be a stimulus or a manure , but rather strongly recommend the able communic- ation of the former to the practical reader , and await the light which may be thrown on the subject in a future ...
... ( Gard . Mag . p . 401. ) as to whether salt be a stimulus or a manure , but rather strongly recommend the able communic- ation of the former to the practical reader , and await the light which may be thrown on the subject in a future ...
Page 8
... Gard . Mag . vol . i . p . 424. ) , I mean to contrive to plant some of the half standards within the interior space , bringing out the stems at six feet high ( b ) , in order to afford them protection from the late frosts when the sap ...
... Gard . Mag . vol . i . p . 424. ) , I mean to contrive to plant some of the half standards within the interior space , bringing out the stems at six feet high ( b ) , in order to afford them protection from the late frosts when the sap ...
Page 34
... ( Gard . Mag . vol . i . p . 432. ) is discontinued ; but perhaps some other person will take the trouble of forming such a list , and whoever does so will find the most complete and easy means which , as we believe , Europe affords , in ...
... ( Gard . Mag . vol . i . p . 432. ) is discontinued ; but perhaps some other person will take the trouble of forming such a list , and whoever does so will find the most complete and easy means which , as we believe , Europe affords , in ...
Page 35
... ( Gard . Mag . vol . i . p . 318. ) The well - known liber- ality of these gentlemen will , we are sure , afford free access and every facility for making the necessary observations . We shall be happy to suggest what we consider the best ...
... ( Gard . Mag . vol . i . p . 318. ) The well - known liber- ality of these gentlemen will , we are sure , afford free access and every facility for making the necessary observations . We shall be happy to suggest what we consider the best ...
Page 61
... Gard . § 4453. ) or what the French call " taille à la Forsyth , " from Mr. Forsyth's treatise on Fruit - trees , but which the author of that work only intended to apply to apples , pears , and cherries . Some receipts for killing ...
... Gard . § 4453. ) or what the French call " taille à la Forsyth , " from Mr. Forsyth's treatise on Fruit - trees , but which the author of that work only intended to apply to apples , pears , and cherries . Some receipts for killing ...
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Popular passages
Page 67 - HORTUS GRAMINEUS WOBURNENSIS : Or, an Account of the Results of Experiments on the Produce and Nutritive Qualities of different Grasses, and other Plants, used as the Food of the more valuable Domestic Animals : instituted by John Duke of Bedford.
Page 184 - Colonies at home; or, Means for rendering the industrious labourer independent of parish relief, and for providing for the poor population of Ireland by the cultivation of the soil.
Page 383 - 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.
Page 337 - Whether the Indians can so prepare that stupifying herb, Datura, that they make it lie several days, months, years, according as they will have it, in a man's body, without doing him any hurt, and at the end kill him without missing half an hour's time?
Page 161 - ... consists of the same metal united to oxygen. When water is present, which can afford oxygen to the sodium, soda may be obtained in several modes from salt. The same reasoning will apply to the operation of the pure mineral alkali, or the carbonated alkali, as to that of the vegetable alkali ; and when common salt acts as a manure, it is probably by entering into the composition of the plant in the same manner as gypsum, phosphate of lime, and the alkalies.
Page 142 - Fig. 8.—Fan,training ; first stage. •Fan-training; second stage. headed down to three eyes, placed in such a manner as to throw out one leading shoot, and one shoot on each side ; the two lowermost shoots are to be headed down to two eyes, so as to throw out one leading shoot, and one shoot on the uppermost side, as shown in fig.
Page 252 - Marquess of Hastings. The seeds were sown in the experimental grass garden at Woburn Abbey, where they vegetated readily, and produced plants which flowered the second year from seed. These perfected seed in the month of October, and the plants raised from this seed the following spring differed in no respect from those the produce of the Indian seed.
Page 252 - Thee, O Darbha, the learned proclaim a divinity, not subject to age or death ; thee they call the armour of India, the preserver of regions, the destroyer of enemies ; a gem that gives increase to the field. At the time when the ocean resounded, when the clouds murmured, and lightnings flashed, then was Darbha produced, pure as a drop of fine gold...
Page 383 - A GRAMMAR of BOTANY, illustrative of artificial, as well as natural Classification, with an explanation of Jussieu's System.
Page 78 - Guide de l'Amateur de Champignons, ou Précis de l'Histoire des Champignons alimentaires, vénéneux, et employés dans les arts, qui croissent sur le sol de la France.