The Gardener's Magazine and Register of Rural and Domestic Improvement, Volume 1John Claudius Loudon Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green, 1826 - Agriculture |
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Page 1
... remains with us to the latest period of life , and in- creases rather than diminishes . Next to the gratification of possessing any object , is the pleasure of reading or conversing about it : and on this prin- ciple , we think that a ...
... remains with us to the latest period of life , and in- creases rather than diminishes . Next to the gratification of possessing any object , is the pleasure of reading or conversing about it : and on this prin- ciple , we think that a ...
Page 3
... remains in the same situation for twenty years , can scarcely avoid during that time falling greatly behind in the knowledge of modern improvements . Supposing him to leave his situation and go to work in a London nursery , he would be ...
... remains in the same situation for twenty years , can scarcely avoid during that time falling greatly behind in the knowledge of modern improvements . Supposing him to leave his situation and go to work in a London nursery , he would be ...
Page 5
... remain as examples of what might still be done ; but in laying out new , or improving old residences , there seems to be a great want , either of industry or ability to profit from them . There are , no doubt , exceptions ; but there is ...
... remain as examples of what might still be done ; but in laying out new , or improving old residences , there seems to be a great want , either of industry or ability to profit from them . There are , no doubt , exceptions ; but there is ...
Page 24
... remain with others to decide which are the most accurate , and as the discovery of truth is the object of both , the determination will be equally acceptable , whatever may be the decision . In the supposition that my opinions of the ...
... remain with others to decide which are the most accurate , and as the discovery of truth is the object of both , the determination will be equally acceptable , whatever may be the decision . In the supposition that my opinions of the ...
Page 31
... remain three or four minutes in the salt water cistern , whatever has been in them comes out , and is seen writhing and dying in the water just as worms come out of the ground and die on the surface after a watering with lime water ...
... remain three or four minutes in the salt water cistern , whatever has been in them comes out , and is seen writhing and dying in the water just as worms come out of the ground and die on the surface after a watering with lime water ...
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abundance Agriculture alba appearance Archeria beautiful blossoms Botanic Garden botanist branches buds bulbs Camellia coccinea collection Colorans colour common contains crop cultivated culture Dalhousie Castle Dioscorides dung establishment expence feet flavour Flora flowers flue fruit trees Gardener's Magazine grafting grapes grasses green green-house ground growing hardy heat herbaceous Horticultural Society hot-houses improvement inches insects labour late latter leaves Loddiges London London Horticultural Society manure melons mode natural nearly nectarine neighbourhood nursery observed ornamental ornamental plants Paris Park peaches pears peas pine apples plants plates potatoes pots practical Prangos present Price produce quantity readers remarks ripen ROBERT SWEET roots rubra Scotland season seeds sent shoots shrubs soil sorts sown species specimens strawberries taste Thomas Andrew Knight tion tivated varieties vegetables vines Walkeria wall winter wood young
Popular passages
Page 233 - Improvement, and Management of Landed Property, and the Cultivation and Economy of the Animal and Vegetable Productions of Agriculture, including all the latest Improvements. A general History of Agriculture in all Countries, and a Statistical View of its present State, with suggestions for its future progress in the British Isles.
Page 74 - Bryologia Britannica: Containing the Mosses of Great Britain and Ireland systematically arranged and described according to the Method of Bruch and Schimper ; with 61 illustrative Plates. Being a New Edition, enlarged and altered, of the Muscologia Britannica of Messrs. Hooker and Taylor. 8vo. 42s.; or, with the Plates coloured, price £4.
Page 234 - LOUDON'S ENCYCLOPEDIA of AGRICULTURE: comprising the Laying-out, Improvement, and Management of Landed Property, and the Cultivation and Economy of the Productions of Agriculture. With 1,100 Woodcuts. 8vo. 21s. London's Encyclopaedia of Gardening : comprising the Theory and Practice of Horticulture, Floriculture, Arboriculture, and Landscape Gardening.
Page 288 - Evaporation increases in a prodigiously rapid ratio with the velocity of the wind; and any thing which retards the motion of the latter is very efficacious in diminishing the amount of the former; the same surface, which in a calm state of the air would exhale 100. parts of moisture, would yield 125 in a moderate breeze, and 150 in a high wind.
Page 470 - I ihink it is about forty yards long. It is a great curiosity." In some of the villages near Northampton, are some elder trees of singularly unusual size.
Page 179 - I should find it difficult to resist the conclusion, that however the labourer has derived benefit from the cheapness of manufactured commodities, and from many inventions of common utility, he is much inferior in ability to support a family, to his ancestors three or four centuries ago.
Page 234 - A TREATISE on the CULTURE and MANAGEMENT of FRUIT TREES, in which a new Method of Pruning and Training is fully described. To which Is added, a New and Improved Edition of " Observations on the Diseases, Defects, and Injuries in all Kinds of Fruit and Forest Trees : with an Account ol a particular Method of Cure.
Page 361 - ... a short account is added of some of the principal foreign species. CONVERSATIONS ON MINERALOGY. With Plates, engraved by Mr. and Mrs.
Page 434 - HORTUS BRITANNICUS ; a Catalogue of all the Plants Indigenous, Cultivated in, or Introduced to Britain. Part I. The Linnaean Arrangement, in which nearly 30,000 Species are enumerate'd : preceded by an Introduction.