The Florist and Pomologist: A Pictorial Monthly Magazine of Flowers, Fruits, and General Horticulture ..., Volumes 5-6Published at the "Journal of Horticulture" Office, 1866 - Floriculture |
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Page 2
... give them in this paper . Mr. Salter has , as usual , some superb flowers . It is a rich treat to walk through his houses in the month of November , if it were only to see what can be made of the Chrysanthemum as a plant for ...
... give them in this paper . Mr. Salter has , as usual , some superb flowers . It is a rich treat to walk through his houses in the month of November , if it were only to see what can be made of the Chrysanthemum as a plant for ...
Page 12
... give air freely on all favourable days . Early in May I repot the plants into 32's , using the same description of soil as before . I now plunge them in a cold frame in a shady situation for the summer months , and in the end of July I ...
... give air freely on all favourable days . Early in May I repot the plants into 32's , using the same description of soil as before . I now plunge them in a cold frame in a shady situation for the summer months , and in the end of July I ...
Page 15
... Give air daily , according to the state of the weather ; remove decayed leaves , and any plants infested with thrips should be cleaned at once , by fumigating them with tobacco three or four times , with intervals of a day or two ...
... Give air daily , according to the state of the weather ; remove decayed leaves , and any plants infested with thrips should be cleaned at once , by fumigating them with tobacco three or four times , with intervals of a day or two ...
Page 16
... give air to those under glass whenever the days are mild , to keep them from drawing . all occasions when the ... gives the plants a yellow appearance for a time , but they soon recover , and are none the worse for it . The compost for ...
... give air to those under glass whenever the days are mild , to keep them from drawing . all occasions when the ... gives the plants a yellow appearance for a time , but they soon recover , and are none the worse for it . The compost for ...
Page 18
... give them no shading , nor any protection whatever , but they are well attended to in watering . About the beginning of August I shift the plants into the pots in which they are to flower . The plants are left in the same situation ...
... give them no shading , nor any protection whatever , but they are well attended to in watering . About the beginning of August I shift the plants into the pots in which they are to flower . The plants are left in the same situation ...
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Common terms and phrases
autumn awarded Azaleas beautiful beds bloom border bottom heat branches bright buds bulbs Calceolarias carmine centre Chasselas Chiswick colour Conifers crop cultivation culture dark dwarf early edged EDLINGTON Endive exhibited feet high first-class certificate flavour FLORIST foliage freely frost fruit trees Fuchsias glass Grapes green greenhouse ground grow grown growth habit hardy inches keep kinds leaf mould leaves lilac loam Madame manure Messrs month Nectarines Nosegay orange Orchids pale Peaches Pears Pelargoniums petals pink plants plenty POMOLOGIST pots Primula Princess of Wales produced pruning purple racemes remarkable require rich ripen roots rose Royal Horticultural Royal Horticultural Society scarlet season seed seedlings sepals shade shoots showy soil South Kensington species specimens spring stems stove striking summer temperature trusses Turner variegated variety Veitch Vines violet wall weather winter wood Wrotham Park yellow young Zonal
Popular passages
Page 129 - The effect upon vegetation of the non-visible calorific rays at the other extremity of the spectrum have been but little studied. Accordiag to the experiments we have on this subject, they would appear to have but little power over any of the functions ; but it would be worth while to investigate further the calorific regions of the spectrum by employing Dr. Tyndall's process, that is, by means of iodine dissolved in bisulphide of carbon, which permits no trace of visible light to pass. How interesting...
Page 130 - With the blue glasses, which allowed some green and yellow to pass, that which was red or yellow in the leaf had spread, so that there only remained a green border or edge. Under the nearly pure violet glasses the foliage became almost uniformly green.
Page 129 - Julius Sachs, in a series of very important experiments, again affirmed the truth. It is really the yellow and orange rays that have the most power, and the blue and violet rays the least, in the phenomena of vegetable chemistry, contrary to that which occurs in mineral chemistry, at least in the case of chlorid of silver.
Page 128 - The best ascertained facts are the importance of sunlight for green coloring, the decomposition of carbonic-acid gas by the foliage, and certain phenomena relating to the direction or position of stems and leaves. There remains much yet to learn upon the effect of diffused light, the combination of time and light, and the relative importance of light and heat. Does a prolonged light of several days or weeks, such as occurs in the polar regions, produce in exhalation of oxygen, and in the fixing of...
Page 133 - Charlatanism may slide in among flowers. Botany, on the contrary, is a science, and consequently rests on the investigation of pure and simple truth. A horticulturist who allows himself to be influenced by a scientific spirit necessarily frees himself from over-selfish tendencies. Natural history, on its side, by reason of the perfection of its method, its nomenclature and its minute observations, has something technical and dry about it, which contrasts with the grandeur of nature, and with the...
Page 128 - I should like, were it possible, to have a greenhouse placed in some large horticultural establishment or botanic garden, under the direction of some ingenious and accurate physiologist, and adapted to experiments on vegetable physiology; and this is, within a little, my idea of such a construction : — The building should be sheltered from all external variations of temperature; to effect which I imagine it should be in a great measure below the level of the ground. I would have it built of thick...
Page 127 - ... progress has been made in these matters. The evil consists in this, that when it is desired to observe the action of temperature, either fixed or varied, mean or extreme, or the effect of light, it is exceedingly difficult, and sometimes impossible, when observations are made in the usual manner, to eliminate the effects of the constant variations of heat and light. In the laboratory it is possible to operate under more exactly defined conditions, but they are rarely sufficiently persistent;...
Page 131 - ... crops, but a short distance off, may be more or less ordinary in quality. The two shrubs require a temperate climate, but the vine needs heat and no rain during summer...
Page 128 - With a view to these researches, of which I merely point out the general nature, but which are immensely varied in details, I lately put this question :* — " Could not experimental greenhouses be built, in which the temperature might be regulated for a prolonged time, and be either fixed, constant, or variable, according to the wish of the observer?
Page 156 - ... of mignonette, or rather ornament a vase half full of mignonette with a few blooms of sweet peas, and you get a charming effect, because you follow the natural arrangement by avoiding the crowding of the blooms, and putting them with the green foliage, which they want to set them off.