The Florist and Pomologist: A Pictorial Monthly Magazine of Flowers, Fruits, and General Horticulture ...Published at the "Journal of Horticulture" Office, 1878 - Floriculture |
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Page 2
... habit , combined with its stout - textured and somewhat bold and arching fronds . Mr. Bull's figure , which we annex , gives a good idea of its elegant style of growth , the plant represented being not yet old enough to have formed its ...
... habit , combined with its stout - textured and somewhat bold and arching fronds . Mr. Bull's figure , which we annex , gives a good idea of its elegant style of growth , the plant represented being not yet old enough to have formed its ...
Page 13
... habit , with terete stems , and numerous branches , the branches being abundantly clothed with bluntish broadly - ovate leaves nearly an inch in length , and producing flowers of the inconspicuous character which is observable in very ...
... habit , with terete stems , and numerous branches , the branches being abundantly clothed with bluntish broadly - ovate leaves nearly an inch in length , and producing flowers of the inconspicuous character which is observable in very ...
Page 17
... habit . The two types , californica and crocea , have continued to be grown to this day , and as already noted , are amongst the most gorgeous of our hardy flowers . Several garden varieties which have been produced , as alba and rosea ...
... habit . The two types , californica and crocea , have continued to be grown to this day , and as already noted , are amongst the most gorgeous of our hardy flowers . Several garden varieties which have been produced , as alba and rosea ...
Page 25
... habit -it grows only from 12 in . to 18 in . high , and produces quite an abundance of blossoms . The we have in this novelty obtained a great acquisi -. 1878. ] belong to the group which originated in ker- mesina , the colour of whose ...
... habit -it grows only from 12 in . to 18 in . high , and produces quite an abundance of blossoms . The we have in this novelty obtained a great acquisi -. 1878. ] belong to the group which originated in ker- mesina , the colour of whose ...
Page 26
... habit , that it will make an excellent plant for growing in pots for decorative purposes . Indeed , in October , when they should be put into a cool greenhouse . The plants will then flower freely through the autumn and winter months ...
... habit , that it will make an excellent plant for growing in pots for decorative purposes . Indeed , in October , when they should be put into a cool greenhouse . The plants will then flower freely through the autumn and winter months ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alexander Meiklejohn amongst Anthurium Auricula autumn Azaleas beautiful beds Bizarres bloom blossoms border bright bulbs Carnation CARNATION AND PICOTEE Cineraria cold cold frame colour crimson crop Crystal Palace cultivation culture decorative Douglas dwarf early edge effect exhibition F. D. Horner favourable Ferns First-class Certificate florists flowers foliage fronds frost fruit Fuchsias green greenhouse ground grow growers grown growth habit hardy inches late leaves loam Lord Loxford manure Messrs Nectarines nursery Pansy Peach Pears Peas Pelargoniums perfect petals Picotee pink plants Polyanthus pots prize produce purple remarkable require ripening roots Rose Royal Royal Horticultural Society Samuel Barlow Sarah Payne scarlet season seedling seeds shaded shoots Simonite soil sorts sown species specimens spring stem summer surface temperature tint tion trees Tulip Turner varieties Veitch and Sons VILLA GARDENING vines weather winter wood yellow
Popular passages
Page 32 - APPLES.—By a careful analysis it has been found that apples contain a larger amount of phosphorus, or brain-food, than any other fruit or vegetable; and on this account they are very important to sedentary men, who work their brains rather than their muscles. They also contain the acids which are needed...
Page 32 - ... mostly in their juices, are of course mostly soluble, and as their solid material is mostly woody fibre, and indigestible, they also furnish waste, which is very important to sedentary men, inclined as they are to constipation. They also contain the acids which are needed every day, especially in sedentary men, the action of whose liver is sluggish, to eliminate effete matters, which, if retained in the system, produce inaction of the brain, and indeed of the whole system, causing jaundice, sleepiness,...
Page 120 - ... other two shall stand by and stop him when they do not agree, one putting down on paper the number of points allotted to each bloom as they are decided upon, and adding up the total number of points given to each stand or exhibit. " Three points should be given for high-class blooms ; two for medium; one for those not so good, but not bad enough to cut out ; and one or even two extra points for a very superior bloorn.
Page 120 - Form, shall imply : petals abundant and of good substance, regularly and gracefully arranged within a circular outline, and having a well-formed centre. " Size shall imply that the bloom is a full-size representative specimen of the variety. " Brightness shall include : freshness, brilliancy, and purity of colour.
Page 148 - ... dry air is not so good, as it absorbs the moisture and aroma from the fruit, injures its flavor, and causes it to wilt and. shrivel up. After being kept in such a room a few days they will begin to turn, and some of them will mellow ; then they should be sold or used befoie they soften. The boxes, barrels, or whatever they may be placed in, should be covered with papers to exclude the light and prevent the escape of the aroma. Care should also be exercised to avoid placing them so deep in barrels...
Page 186 - O'er rustling fallen leaves doth blow ; In gold and purple robed, the trees The fulness of Thy beauty show. 193. HYMN OF WINTER. LM ' T is Winter now- ; the fallen snow Has left the heavens all coldly clear ; Through leafless boughs the sharp winds blow, And all the earth lies dead and drear.
Page 147 - Pear-growers agree that all kinds of Pears should be picked while green and ripened in the house, but at just what time they should be picked, and just how they should be handled to ripen them, are subjects on which there is much diversity of opinion. But in order that we may intelligently understand this subject, let us see what this ripening process is, and what * From a Prize Essay, read at a Meeting or the Massachusetts' Horticultural Society, January 12, 1878.
Page 148 - The largest and ripest should lie picked first — as soon as the windfalls will ripen and be good — and the smaller and greener ones should be left to receive the additional sap which the earlier ones would have appropriated. Sometimes one side of a tree will be much earlier than the other, in which case the earliest side should be picked first. This early picking should be ripened off at once by the process already described, only observing that the greener the fruit the higher temperature it...
Page 148 - ... them into market early, before the bulk of the crop is received, and we can keep a part of the crop until quite late and sell when the rush is over, thereby obtaining better prices. Splendid specimens for exhibition purposes may be obtained by leaving a few of the largest and fairest specimens on the tree and picking all others early ; then, when fully grown, pick and ripen between papers or blankets, as the weather and degree of ripeness they have attained on the tree may require. A great many...
Page 147 - A good pear may be ripened so as to be solid, juicy, niid sweet, with a good rich color to its skin, or it may be made corky, insipid, and rotten at the core ; or again it may be shrivelled, sour, and unattractive, and these different conditions may all be obtained the same season, and from fruit grown on the same tree. This being the case, the importance of proper ripening will readily be seen. "While different varieties may require slightly different treatment, owing to their individual characteristics...