The forest pruner; or, Timber owner's assistant, Volume 11808 |
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Page 63
... reduced the matter to so much certainty , that if he err in respect to their application , he will be considered as a person unacquainted with the com- mon maxims or rules of his profession , - while , with regard to British Fir Timber ...
... reduced the matter to so much certainty , that if he err in respect to their application , he will be considered as a person unacquainted with the com- mon maxims or rules of his profession , - while , with regard to British Fir Timber ...
Page 68
... reducing it to Logs , the greater part , or the whole of the sap is cut away ; as both ends are brought to one scantling ; and what we have in Plank is necessarily still more reduced , to bring it to the usual breadth . We may add. 68.
... reducing it to Logs , the greater part , or the whole of the sap is cut away ; as both ends are brought to one scantling ; and what we have in Plank is necessarily still more reduced , to bring it to the usual breadth . We may add. 68.
Page 70
... reduced to a small compass , namely Knottiness , the consequence of the natural form of the plants , and want of density , the conse- quence of quick growth . For the sake of order , the reader is referred to the article PRUNING , where ...
... reduced to a small compass , namely Knottiness , the consequence of the natural form of the plants , and want of density , the conse- quence of quick growth . For the sake of order , the reader is referred to the article PRUNING , where ...
Page 92
... reduced with water . - To prevent the brush burning it must go into the oil af- ter every third or fourth operation , as at first . - The operator must have the spirit in glass only , and con- sider he is using Fire , though in a liquid ...
... reduced with water . - To prevent the brush burning it must go into the oil af- ter every third or fourth operation , as at first . - The operator must have the spirit in glass only , and con- sider he is using Fire , though in a liquid ...
Page 102
... reducing trees , previously vigorous , to a state of languor , and not unfrequently killing them , as it were , by inches . Of these , as of the insects which infest Fruit trees , we may observe , that they are uniformly most numerous ...
... reducing trees , previously vigorous , to a state of languor , and not unfrequently killing them , as it were , by inches . Of these , as of the insects which infest Fruit trees , we may observe , that they are uniformly most numerous ...
Common terms and phrases
admit afterwards appear applied ascer asserted attention bark branches cause certainly circumstance coat colour consequence considerable considered course CREASE damage dead tops decay deciduous defect degree displaced drying oil Duke of Bedford durability effect equally evil expence fects feet Fir Timber forest trees former grow growth head heal height hence Huddersfield idea improve inches increase knots knotty Larch latter likewise linseed oil mahogany means ment method of pruning moisture nature necessary neral never notice observed obstruction occasioned operation opinion paint plant plantations Planter Plate practice present produce proper properties prove pruning fruit trees purpose Quackery quantity reader reason rience roots rotten sap-vessels scantling shelter shew shoots siderable situation soil sort species stem stool stump sufficient supposed taking thick thin tion tolerable West Smithfield white lead whole Woburn wood wound
Popular passages
Page 18 - Observations on the Diseases, Defects, and Injuries in all Kinds of Fruit and Forest Trees ; with an Account of a particular Method of Cure.
Page 65 - that he had seen some of it, which, after it had been 300 years in the roof of an old castle, was as fresh and full of sap as new imported from Memel...
Page 4 - In forest annals, no tree affords so mauy fond, so many grand memorials as the, oak; no object is more sublime than this stately plant; and yet, as Pontey truly says, " even our mushrooms are tended with a nurse's care, while the oak, the pride of our woods, the chief material of our navy, and consequently the bulwark of our country, is (too often) left to thrive or rot by chance, unheeded, if not forgotten.
Page 24 - ... thick paint), with a painter's brush, covering the stem carefully over. This softens the old scabrous bark, which peels off during the following winter and spring, and is succeeded by a fine smooth new bark.
Page 25 - ... a plaster, but now in a liquid state, and laid over the wounded or injured part of the tree, with a painter's brush : it is of a soft and healing nature, possesses an absorbent and adhesive quality, and by resisting the force of washing rains, the contraction of nipping frosts, and the effects of a warm sun or drying winds, excludes the pernicious influence of a changeable atmosphere.
Page 279 - Discovery, p. 316. tenant, he was appointed to command the Hecla, and to take charge of the second arctic expedition, on which service he was employed two years. On the 14th of November, 1820, he was promoted to the rank of Commander. On the 19th of December, 1820, the Bedfordean Gold Medal of the Bath and West of England Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce, was unanimously voted to him. On the 30th of December of that year, he was appointed to the Fury, with orders...
Page 225 - ... cloths, where they can be applied. The hollow may then be filled with very dry sand, and its mouth plugged with wood. The plug should be driven, so as to be level with the inner bark ; as, by that means, nature's efforts would not be obstructed, in growing over it.
Page 23 - He also mentions a discovery which he lias recently made, and which, as being calculated to save time and labour, may deserve attention. Instead of paring away the bark, as had heretofore been the practice, and covering the stem with the composition...