The Gardener's Magazine and Register of Rural & Domestic Improvement, Volume 3;Volume 13Longman, Rees, Orome, Brown and Green, 1837 |
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Página v
... considered the more interesting - 223 . 321. 605 . Sowerby's Small Edition of English Bo- tany Baxter's British Flowering Plants Hooker's Icones Plantarum The Gardener's Gazette · 319 - · . 606 -606 - 606 - 606 · The Magazine of ...
... considered the more interesting - 223 . 321. 605 . Sowerby's Small Edition of English Bo- tany Baxter's British Flowering Plants Hooker's Icones Plantarum The Gardener's Gazette · 319 - · . 606 -606 - 606 - 606 · The Magazine of ...
Página 1
... considered useful and interesting to the gardening world in general , as well as to those who may feel a particular interest in the places visited . - Ditton Park . In taking a view of Ditton Park , the seat of Lord Montagu , I was ...
... considered useful and interesting to the gardening world in general , as well as to those who may feel a particular interest in the places visited . - Ditton Park . In taking a view of Ditton Park , the seat of Lord Montagu , I was ...
Página 2
... I could bring to mind that , in my opinion , approached near to it in excellence , was at Wyke House , near Brentford ; which , some thirty years ago , was considered as one of the best gardens 2 Notes on Gardens and Country Seats :
... I could bring to mind that , in my opinion , approached near to it in excellence , was at Wyke House , near Brentford ; which , some thirty years ago , was considered as one of the best gardens 2 Notes on Gardens and Country Seats :
Página 3
ago , was considered as one of the best gardens round London . There the garden has also the advantage of a loamy soil , but , I think , of a less soapy nature than that at Stoke Place ; and it may , in consequence , be somewhat less ...
ago , was considered as one of the best gardens round London . There the garden has also the advantage of a loamy soil , but , I think , of a less soapy nature than that at Stoke Place ; and it may , in consequence , be somewhat less ...
Página 5
... considered as the court of honour . The avenue , with its broad road and wide verges , or rather slips , together with the mansion and court of honour , cannot fail to produce a striking effect on the visitor when entering on that side ...
... considered as the court of honour . The avenue , with its broad road and wide verges , or rather slips , together with the mansion and court of honour , cannot fail to produce a striking effect on the visitor when entering on that side ...
Outras edições - Ver todos
The Gardener's Magazine and Register of Rural & Domestic Improvement, Volume 11 Visualização completa - 1835 |
The Gardener's Magazine and Register of Rural & Domestic Improvement, Volume 4 Visualização completa - 1828 |
The Gardener's Magazine and Register of Rural & Domestic Improvement, Volume 3 Visualização completa - 1828 |
Termos e frases comuns
appearance apples Arboretum autumn beautiful beurré Botanic Garden botanists Botany branches Brit buds calceolarias climate of London collection colour crop cultivation dahlias David Don diameter dozen bunches evergreen exhibited Fl.-Gard Floricultural flower-garden flowering plants flowers frost fruit genus Glasgow Botanic Garden grafting grapes green green-house plants ground grow growth hardy herbaceous Hort Horticultural Society insect kind kitchen-garden larva larvæ leaves Lindl Loddiges London Magazine Messrs mistletoe mode monthly numbers natural nearly neighbourhood notice Nursery observed Orchidacea ornamental Park pear pelargoniums pine plantations potatoes pots prizes produced remarkable Rhododendron roots Sea-kale season seedling seeds sent shoots shrubs side situation soil sorts species specimens stem stove surface trees truffles turnip variety vegetables vines wall William Jackson Hooker winter wood yellow young
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Página xvi - Residence, or of a situation on which to form one ; the Arrangement and Furnishing of the House; and the Laying-out, Planting, and general Management of the Garden and Grounds ; the whole adapted for grounds from one perch to fifty acres and upwards in extent ; intended for the instruction of those who know little of Gardening or Rural Affairs, and more particularly for the use of Ladies.
Página 604 - The parterre is indeed of box, but so rarely designed and accurately kept cut, that the embroidery makes a wonderful effect to the lodgings which front it.
Página 517 - The heav'n's four quarters on the tender bark, And to the North or South restore the side, Which, at their birth, did heat or cold abide : So strong is custom ; such effects can use In tender souls of pliant plants produce.
Página 278 - To the cultivators of ornamental plants, the facility of raising hybrid varieties affords an endless source of interest and amusement. He sees in the several species of each genus that he possesses the materials with which he must work, and he considers in what manner he can blend them to the best advantage, looking to the several gifts in which each excels, whether of hardiness to endure our seasons, of brilliancy...
Página 287 - L.,) which will sometimes lay an egg in every pea of a pod, and thus destroy it. — Something similar I have been told (I suspect it is a short-snouted weevil) occasionally injures beans. In this country, however, the mischief caused by the Bruchus is seldom very serious; but in North America another species (B. Pisi, L.) is most alarmingly destructive, its ravages being at one time so universal as to put an end in some places to the cultivation of that favourite pulse. No wonder then that...
Página 219 - I felt no doubt of its being an entirely distinct plant. Even when Lord Fitzwilliam assured me that it was beyond all doubt an accidental sport of Catasetum tridentatum, I still adhered to my idea that an imported plant of Monachanthus viridis had been accidentally taken for the latter common species. Nor do I think that, as a botanist, I was to be blamed for these errors; the genera being founded upon characters...
Página 222 - Camellieae, and of the varieties of Camellia Japonica, cultivated in the gardens of Great Britain; the drawings by Alfred Chandler, the descriptions by William Beattie Booth.
Página 511 - ... sentimental natives, to assist the expression of their feelings ; they are offered by the devotee at the shrine of his favourite saint, by the lover at the feet of his mistress, and by the sorrowing survivor at the grave of his friend : whether, in short, on fast days or feast days, on occasion of rejoicing or in moments of distress, these flowers are sought for with an avidity which would seem to say that there was ' no sympathy like theirs;' — thus,
Página 210 - ... extremity, becomes a separate plant. In the case of the seeds which germinated on the bark of trees in our garden at Bayswater, the embryos had not separated from the seed on Aug. 15th, the day on which we correct this proof. When the mistletoe germinates on the upper side of a branch, the shoots bend upwards ; but, if they are placed on the under side, they descend : when they are placed on the side of a perpendicular trunk they proceed horizontally, spreading, of course, with the growth of...
Página 592 - ... in the world has a more lofty and imposing appearance, whether overtopping its humbler companions in some woody district, or rising in solitary grandeur in some open plain. Even the untutored children of Africa are so struck with the majesty of its appearance, that they designate it the God-tree, and account it sacrilege to injure it with the axe ; so that, not unfrequently, not even the fear of punishment will induce them to cut it down.