A guide to the orchard and kitchen garden; or, An account of ... fruit and vegetables, ed. by J. Lindley1831 - 80 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 82
... STONE PIPPIN . G. Lindl . in Hort . Trans . Vol . iv . p . 69 . White Stone Pippin . Hort . Soc . Cat . No. 1071 . White Pippin , of Norfolk . Fruit middle - sized , of an oblong figure , tapering to the crown , where it is narrow ...
... STONE PIPPIN . G. Lindl . in Hort . Trans . Vol . iv . p . 69 . White Stone Pippin . Hort . Soc . Cat . No. 1071 . White Pippin , of Norfolk . Fruit middle - sized , of an oblong figure , tapering to the crown , where it is narrow ...
Page 128
... Stone Pippin Whitmore's Pippin William's Pippin Winter Broaden Winter Colman Winter Majetin Winter Pearmain Winter Queening - 158 Wyken Pippin · 4.4 - 160 Wyker Pippin 93 - 66 Yellow Elliot - 214 - 109 - 110 - 111 Yellow German Reinette ...
... Stone Pippin Whitmore's Pippin William's Pippin Winter Broaden Winter Colman Winter Majetin Winter Pearmain Winter Queening - 158 Wyken Pippin · 4.4 - 160 Wyker Pippin 93 - 66 Yellow Elliot - 214 - 109 - 110 - 111 Yellow German Reinette ...
Page 129
... stone , juicy , rich , and high flavoured . Stone rather small , roundish , com- pressed , but not so much as in some others . Kernel sweet , like a hazel - nut : hence the synonym of Amande Aveline , in France . Ripens from the ...
... stone , juicy , rich , and high flavoured . Stone rather small , roundish , com- pressed , but not so much as in some others . Kernel sweet , like a hazel - nut : hence the synonym of Amande Aveline , in France . Ripens from the ...
Page 130
... Stone much smaller than that of the Moorpark , without a pervious passage . Kernel nearly sweet . Ripe the end of July and beginning of August . We are indebted to the late Mr. Lee for the intro- duction of this Apricot it is a most ...
... Stone much smaller than that of the Moorpark , without a pervious passage . Kernel nearly sweet . Ripe the end of July and beginning of August . We are indebted to the late Mr. Lee for the intro- duction of this Apricot it is a most ...
Page 131
... stone . Juice plentiful and excellent . Stone rather rugged , with a pervious pas- sage , containing a bitter kernel . Ripe the end of August and beginning of September . The Moorpark Apricot , now so universally known throughout ...
... stone . Juice plentiful and excellent . Stone rather rugged , with a pervious pas- sage , containing a bitter kernel . Ripe the end of August and beginning of September . The Moorpark Apricot , now so universally known throughout ...
Other editions - View all
A Guide to the Orchard and Kitchen Garden; Or, an Account of ... Fruit and ... George Lindley No preview available - 2015 |
A Guide to the Orchard and Kitchen Garden; Or, an Account of ... Fruit and ... George Lindley No preview available - 2023 |
A Guide to the Orchard and Kitchen Garden; Or, an Account of ... Fruit and ... George Lindley No preview available - 2023 |
Common terms and phrases
apex apple from November August Bergamot Berries Beurré Black Borecole branches brown buds bunches calyx cavity Chiswick colour crown cultivated deeply inserted dessert apple Duhamel Early espalier excellent Eye small Flesh firm Flesh white Flesh yellowish Flowers Forsyth Frontignan Fruit large Fruit middle-sized garden glands greenish yellow half an inch Herefordshire high flavoured Hort Horticultural inch long inches and three Juice plentiful juicy Langley Lindl melting Mignonne Miller Muscadine Muscat of Alexandria Nectarines Nonpareil Nursery Catalogues oblong open standard oval Parmain Pavie Peach Pear Pippin plaits plants pruning purple quarters in diameter Quince Reinette rich Ripe the beginning Ripe the end Ripe the middle ripened round roundish russet russetty saccharine Scarlet Sea Kale seed shaded side shallow shoots slender sorts specks Stalk an inch Stalk half Stalk short stone sugary sunny side suture sweet three inches tinged Trans tree Twickenham Violet wall
Popular passages
Page ix - It is probable that it was originally due to accident, and also that it was still mere chance which continued to operate down to very modern times. Philosophers are unacquainted with the reason why there should be any tendency to variation from the characters first stamped on any species by Nature ; but all know that this tendency does exist, and in a most remarkable degree in many species. There is in all beings a disposition to deviate from their original nature when cultivated, or even in a wild...
Page 507 - OBSERVATIONS ON THE DISEASES, DEFECTS, AND INJURIES, | IN ALL KINDS OF FRUIT AND FOREST TREES." WITH AN ACCOUNT OF | A PARTICULAR METHOD OF CURE, | PUBLISHED BY ORDER OF GOVERNMENT.
Page 575 - ... sowing of seed for general crops until June or July. If a small quantity of each esteemed variety be sown two or three times in these months, they will produce a plentiful supply for use in autumn and the early part of winter. One ounce of good Endive-seed will produce about five thousand plants. When the plants...
Page x - The power of procuring intermediate varieties, by the intermixture of the pollen and stigma of two different parents, is, however, that which most deserves consideration. We all know that hybrid plants are constantly produced in every garden, and that improvements of the most remarkable kind are yearly occurring in consequence.
Page xiii - Physiologists know that whatever tends to cause a rapid diffusion of the sap and secretions of any plant, causes also the formation of leaf buds instead of flower buds ; and that whatever on the contrary tends to cause an accumulation of sap and secretions, has the effect of producing flower buds in abundance ;" so that a flower bud is often only a contracted branch.
Page 371 - Cones, egg-shaped, solitary, broadest near the base, and tapering to a point, three inches and a half long, and two inches and a half...
Page xii - It seems that cross fertilisation will not take place at all, or very rarely, between different species, unless these species are nearly related to each other; and that the offspring of the two distinct species is itself sterile, or if it possesses the power of multiplying itself by seed, its progeny returns back to the state of one or other of its parents.
Page 466 - York, some time in the end of last century. It remained barren several years, till, during a violent thunder-storm, the whole trunk was struck to the earth and destroyed. The root afterwards threw out a number of vigorous shoots, all of which were allowed to remain, and finally produced fruit. It is, therefore, to be presumed that the stock of the barren kind was the parent of this. Trees were sent to Mr.
Page xi - ... destined by nature for this service, into a little opening in the integuments of the ovulum or young seed. Once deposited there, the particle swells, increases gradually in size, separates into radicle and cotyledons, and finally becomes the embryo, — that part which is to give birth, when the seed is sown, to a new individual. " Such being the mode in which the pollen influences the stigma and subsequently the seed, a practical consequence of great importance necessarily follows, viz. that...
Page 508 - ... till the whole is covered over with it, letting it remain for half an hour, to absorb the moisture ; then apply more powder, rubbing it on gently with the hand, and repeating the application of the powder till the whole plaster becomes a dry smooth surface.