The Gardeners' Chronicle: A Weekly Illustrated Journal of Horticulture and Allied SubjectsGardeners Chronicle, 1907 - Gardening |
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Page 6
... shoots , these being cut back to one - third their length . Exceptions may be made in respect to horizontally trained trees , leaving such shoots as they are if not more than 12 inches of growth has been made during the past year . It ...
... shoots , these being cut back to one - third their length . Exceptions may be made in respect to horizontally trained trees , leaving such shoots as they are if not more than 12 inches of growth has been made during the past year . It ...
Page 13
... shoots coming from below and all side shoots should be removed after this is done , in order to secure fine , regular main growths . At the first the chief factors are abundant warmth and mois- ture , but so soon as the plants have ...
... shoots coming from below and all side shoots should be removed after this is done , in order to secure fine , regular main growths . At the first the chief factors are abundant warmth and mois- ture , but so soon as the plants have ...
Page 16
... shoots and keeping the centre of the plants free , little or no pruning is required . If you want to raise young plants from bushes already in your possession , you ought to layer number of shoots at about the latter part of August or ...
... shoots and keeping the centre of the plants free , little or no pruning is required . If you want to raise young plants from bushes already in your possession , you ought to layer number of shoots at about the latter part of August or ...
Page 21
... shoots from below . When in good condition , these shoots are pro- duced numerously , and tuft , becoming crowded in time , would then deteriorate . The remedy is division and re - planting . And were this done more frequently the ...
... shoots from below . When in good condition , these shoots are pro- duced numerously , and tuft , becoming crowded in time , would then deteriorate . The remedy is division and re - planting . And were this done more frequently the ...
Page 23
... shoots alike , and there is , therefore , very little to be gained by postponing the work . Last season's shoots are capable of yielding the heaviest crops . Cut out the points of such of these as will be retained at about 20 inches ...
... shoots alike , and there is , therefore , very little to be gained by postponing the work . Last season's shoots are capable of yielding the heaviest crops . Cut out the points of such of these as will be retained at about 20 inches ...
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Common terms and phrases
appear Apple atmosphere autumn Award of Merit Azaleas beautiful beds Begonia blooms border Botanic branches buds bulbs bunches bushes Carnations Cattleya Chronicle Clackmannanshire colour committee Conifers corms Covent Garden crispum crop cultivation culture Cypripedium disease dozen early exhibition February feet high Ferns flowering plants flowers foliage frost fruit fungus grafting green ground growers growing grown growth hardy heat Hippeastrum hybrid inches interest January La Mortola larvæ late leaves lime loam manure Medal meeting Messrs months obtained Odontoglossum Orchid Park Pears Peas Pencarrow petals plants Potato pots Primula Protheroe & Morris pruning racemes require Rhododendrons roots Roses Royal Horticultural Royal Horticultural Society season seed seedlings seen sepals shade shoots shrubs soil sowing sown species specimens spring stems suitable temperature tion trees tubers variety vines weather winter Wisley yellow young
Popular passages
Page 104 - A thousand ages in Thy sight Are like an evening gone ; Short as the watch that ends the night Before the rising sun. 5 Time, like an ever-rolling stream, Bears all its sons away ; They fly forgotten, as a dream Dies at the opening day...
Page 151 - ... months, or to a fine not exceeding fifty pounds, or to both such imprisonment and such fine. (2) For the purposes of this Act the expression "consideration " includes valuable consideration of any kind ; the expression "agent" includes any person employed by or acting for another; and the expression "principal
Page 1 - THE melancholy days are come, the saddest of the year, Of wailing winds, and naked woods, and meadows brown and sere. Heaped in the hollows of the grove, the autumn leaves lie dead ; They rustle to the eddying gust, and to the rabbit's tread ; The robin and the wren are flown, and from the shrubs the jay, And from the wood-top calls the crow through all the gloomy day. Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers...
Page 120 - We know that it may be so if homoeopathic practitioners will but use their influence among medical men and medical students to secure a well filled class-room. HAHNEMANN PUBLISHING SOCIETY. THE annual meeting of this Society will be held at the " Royal Hotel," Matlock, Bath, at 8 o'clock in the evening of Wednesday, September 12th ; and, if necessary, by adjournment, at 9 am on Thursday the 18th.
Page 46 - Abies balsamea, from which it is distinguished by its sharp-pointed leaves. The flowers are unknown. The branches are used for adorning the churches in Mexico. According to Mr. Lambert, the cones are like those of the cedar of Lebanon, but...
Page 15 - This storm shows some very curious and interesting features, in the remarkable violence of the wind, rain and hail, within a small area, and the suddenness with which it burst. There was an area of thunderstorms over the whole of the south of England on the evening of that day. The most violent storm, however, burst over Grayshott on Hindhead at 8.20, and pursued a narrow track through Godalming and Guildford to Ripley, б miles north-east of Guildford.
Page 17 - When a specific name is taken from the name of a man, it is formed in the following way: — (a) When the name ends in a vowel the letter i is added (thus Glazioui from Glaziou ; Bureaui from Bureau), except when the names end in a, when e is added (thus Balansae from Balansa).
Page 44 - It is told with freshness and pathos, and should bo one of the most popular as it is one of the most helpful of children's books. The Cruise of the "Petrel:
Page 177 - to enquire as to the provision which has now been made for affording scientific and technical instruction in agriculture in England and Wales, and to report whether, in view of the practical results which have already been obtained, the existing facilities for the purpose are satisfactory and sufficient, and, if not, in what manner they may with advantage be modified or extended.
Page 18 - Hybrids between species of the same genus, or presumably so, are designated by a formula, and, whenever it seems useful or necessary, by a name. The formula consists of the names or specific epithets of the two parents in alphabetical order, and connected by the sign x . When the hybrid is of known experimental origin the formula may be made more precise by the addition of the signs...