| Garden structures - 1869 - 416 pages
...should not have arrived at complete maturity. This point, however, requires considerable judgment. 6. No imperfect fruit should be stored with that which...clear and beautiful specimens are wanted, they may be packed carefully in dry bran, or in layers of perfectly dry cotton-wool, either in closed boxes... | |
| Jane Loudon - 1870 - 396 pages
...should not have arrived at complete maturity. This point, however, requires considerable judgment. 6. No imperfect fruit should be stored with that which...clear and beautiful specimens are wanted, they may be packed carefully in dry bran, or in layers of perfectly dry cotton-wool, either in closed boxes... | |
| John Jacob Thomas - Agriculture - 1870 - 396 pages
...should not have arrived at complete maturity. This point, however, requires considerable judgment. 6. No imperfect fruit should be stored with that which...lie more than two deep, and no straw should be used. PLANTING BLACK-CAP RASPBERRIRS.—AM Purdy of Palmyra, NY, whose experience is not excelled in raspberry... | |
| Royal Horticultural Society (Great Britain) - Botany - 1870 - 398 pages
...not have arrived at complete maturity. This point, however, requires considerable judgment. 6. That no imperfect fruit should be stored with that which is sound, and that every more or less decayed specimen should be immediately removed. 7. That, if placed on shelves,... | |
| Jane Loudon - 1880 - 204 pages
...should not have arrived at complete maturity. This point, however, requires considerable judgment. 6. No imperfect fruit should be stored with that which...clear and beautiful specimens are wanted, they may be packed carefully in o>ybran, or in layers of perfectly dry cotton-wool, either in closed boxes or... | |
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