The Gardener's Magazine and Register of Rural and Domestic Improvement, المجلد 16John Claudius Loudon Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green, 1840 |
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الصفحة 13
... seen by referring to our Arboretum Britannicum or Hortus Lignosus . Some persons who purchase a few trees and shrubs may be thought to care very little about their names , provided the plants are handsome ; but this is by no means ...
... seen by referring to our Arboretum Britannicum or Hortus Lignosus . Some persons who purchase a few trees and shrubs may be thought to care very little about their names , provided the plants are handsome ; but this is by no means ...
الصفحة 15
... seen through , like that of the robinia . With respect to culture , the roots of trees suitable for the background of a shrubbery ought to be such as descend , like those of the oak or the chestnut , and not such as spread immediately ...
... seen through , like that of the robinia . With respect to culture , the roots of trees suitable for the background of a shrubbery ought to be such as descend , like those of the oak or the chestnut , and not such as spread immediately ...
الصفحة 30
... seen between the scales ; and all the part thus discoloured should be cut away , till it is completely eradicated ; but when it reaches farther than the half of the bulb , it is past remedy , and the bulb must be thrown away . Great ...
... seen between the scales ; and all the part thus discoloured should be cut away , till it is completely eradicated ; but when it reaches farther than the half of the bulb , it is past remedy , and the bulb must be thrown away . Great ...
الصفحة 39
... seen in operation three different specimens of an improved kitchen - range ( said to be " patented " ) , and all founded on the Arnott principle of economising the fuel used , and giving the utmost effect to the heat produced . The ...
... seen in operation three different specimens of an improved kitchen - range ( said to be " patented " ) , and all founded on the Arnott principle of economising the fuel used , and giving the utmost effect to the heat produced . The ...
الصفحة 40
... seen , that the principle of this stove consists in enclosing the body of the fireplace with an air - tight case much larger than the fireplace itself , removable at pleasure , and not in con- tact or connected with it : so it will be ...
... seen , that the principle of this stove consists in enclosing the body of the fireplace with an air - tight case much larger than the fireplace itself , removable at pleasure , and not in con- tact or connected with it : so it will be ...
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طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
álba appearance Arboretum beautiful Belsay boiler border Botanic Garden botanists Botany bottom branches buds bulbs camellias Carclew colour containing covered Crataegus crop cultivation Derby Arboretum drains Dropmore effect England flower-garden Flowering Plants flowers flue frost fruit Gardener's genus glass grafting green green-house ground growing grown growth hardy heat herbaceous Hort Horticultural hot-houses injured insects John Lindley killed kind labellum leaves Lindl Lindley loam Lodd Loddiges London Magazine manure Mexico mode moisture nearly notice Nursery observed ornamental Penn's pipes plants potatoes pots produced quantity racemes raised remarkable ripened roots season seedling seeds shoots shrubs side situation Sketty Society Society's Garden soil species specimens stem stove surface temperature trees and shrubs tubers variety vegetable wall weather Willd William Jackson Hooker winter wood young
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 95 - Tenant's Right of Entering and Quitting Farms, explained by several Specimens of Valuations ; with Remarks on the Cultivation pursued on Soils in different Situations. Adapted to the Use of Landlords, Land-Agents, Appraisers, Farmers, and Tenants. New Edition ; corrected and revised by JOHN DONALDSON.
الصفحة 329 - 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 93 - 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 303 - Not so when plants in the open air are artificially watered. This operation is usually performed in hot dry weather, and must necessarily be very limited in its effects ; it can have little if any influence upon the atmosphere : then, the parched air robs the leaves rapidly of their moisture, so long as the latter is abundant; the roots are suddenly and violently excited, and after a short time the exciting cause is suddenly withdrawn, by the momentary supply of water being cut off by evaporation,...
الصفحة 302 - 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 632 - 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 564 - Histoire des Insectes nuisibles à la Vigne, et particulièrement de la Pyrale.
الصفحة 220 - This mode of life gave health and vigour to my body, and amusement and instruction to my mind ; and to this day I well remember the delicious sleep which succeeded my labours, from which I was again called at an early hour. If I were now asked whom I consider to be happiest of the human race, I should answer, those who cultivate the earth by their own hands.
الصفحة 509 - In considering the various circumstances alluded to in this paper, I was naturally led to inquire into the exact manner in which the death of plants is caused by cold. Very little, however, is to be learned upon this subject from the writings of physiologists. " The common opinion is, that frost acts mechanically upon the tissue of plants, by expanding the fluid they contain, and bursting the cells or vessels in which it is enclosed.
الصفحة 514 - ... power of conducting heat, and consequently augment the susceptibility of plants to the influence of frost; and whatever tends to diminish their humidity, will also diminish their conducting power, and with it their susceptibility ; this is an invariable law, and must consequently be regarded...