The Gardener's Magazine, and Register of Rural & Domestic Improvement, المجلد 16 |
ما يقوله الناس - كتابة مراجعة
لم نعثر على أي مراجعات في الأماكن المعتادة.
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
appearance applied beautiful become better boiler border Botanic bottom branches buds bulbs called cause close collection colour common considered containing covered cultivation effect experience flowers four fruit garden give given glass ground growing grown growth hardy heat Hort Horticultural increase injured Italy keep killed kind late leaves less light Lindl London manner March matter means mode moisture nature nearly never notice object observed pipes plants pots practice present probably produced prove quantity raised received remarks require roots season seeds seen sent shoots shrubs side situation Society Society's soil soon sorts species specimens spring stem surface taken temperature trees varieties vegetable wall whole winter wood young
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 95 - Elements of Agricultural Chemistry ; in a Course of Lectures for the Board of Agriculture, delivered between 1802 and 1812.
الصفحة 94 - OF VALUING RENTS AND TILLAGES, And the Tenant's Right of Entering and Quitting Farms, explained by several Specimens of Valuations; and Remarks on the Cultivation pursued on Soils in different Situations. Adapted to the Use of Landlords. Land-Agents, Appraisers, Farmers, and Tenants.
الصفحة 92 - Theory and Practice of Horticulture ; or, an Attempt to explain the principal Operations of Gardening upon Physiological Grounds: Being the Second Edition of the Theory of Horticulture, much enlarged ; with 98 Woodcuts.
الصفحة 267 - WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON, ANNUAL OF SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY ; or, Year Book of Facts in Science and Art, exhibiting the most important Discoveries and Improvements in Mechanics, Useful Arts, Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, Astronomy, Meteorology, Zoology, Botany, Mineralogy, Geology, Geography, Antiquities, etc.
الصفحة 626 - Vegetable and animal substances deposited in the soil, as is shown by universal experience, are consumed during the process of vegetation ; and they can only nourish the plant by affording solid matters capable of being dissolved by water, or gaseous substances capable of being...
الصفحة 328 - Bodens, undertakes to be a courier. Indeed, Tom, you have betrayed yourself too soon ! Mr. Grenville, your friend, your patron, your benefactor, who raised you from a depth, compared to which even Bradshaw's family stands on an eminence, was hardly cold in his grave, when you solicited the office of go-between to Lord North. You could not, in my eyes, be more contemptible, though you were convicted (as I dare say you might be) of having constantly betrayed him in his lifetime. Since I know your employment,...
الصفحة 301 - For some days, the only apparent difference was that the earth continued damp under the green and blue fluids, whereas it rapidly dried under the red and yellow. The plumula burst the cuticle in the blue and green lights, before any change was evident in the other parts. After ten days, under the blue fluid there was a crop of cress, of as bright a green as any which grew in full light, and far more abundant.
الصفحة 510 - Hibiscus militaris, not only the cells of the bark, hut especially those of the pith, were so completely broken up, that it was difficult to obtain a thin slice of those parts for examination. In no case, however, have I found any kind of tissue ruptured, except the soft cellular dodecahedral or prismatical. It would also seem that M. Payen recognises the laceration of tissue by frost, for he ascribes the acridity of frozen potatoes to an extravasation of the acrid matter which exists in the...
الصفحة 627 - Humus acts in the same manner in a soil permeable to air as in the air itself; it is a continued source of carbonic acid, which it emits very slowly. An atmosphere of carbonic acid, formed at the expense of the oxygen of the air, surrounds every particle of decaying humus. The cultivation of land, by tilling and loosening the soil, causes a free and unobstructed access of air. An atmosphere of carbonic acid is therefore contained in every fertile soil, and is the first and most important food for...
الصفحة 607 - Mag., t. 3849) had carefully noticed the growth of the flower-bud of Musas in this country in 1840. He says : — " The flower-bud, as I have proved by cutting down full-grown plants of Musa rosacea and Cavendishii, and I think also of M.