The Young Gardener's Assistant: Containing a Catalogue of Garden & Flower Seeds, with Practical Directions Under Each Head for the Cultivation of Culinary Vegetables and Flowers ; Also Directions for Cultivating Fruit Trees, the Grape Vine, &c., to which is Added a Calendar, Showing the Work Necessary to be Done in the Various Departments of Gardening in Every Month of the Year |
From inside the book
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Page 18
... grow freely when five and even seven years old ; but it is not prudent to venture seed in the garden , of the ... grown with some of a lemon - colour , they produced seed of a mixed and spurious breed , and as this is not a solitary ...
... grow freely when five and even seven years old ; but it is not prudent to venture seed in the garden , of the ... grown with some of a lemon - colour , they produced seed of a mixed and spurious breed , and as this is not a solitary ...
Page 20
... growing , they would vegetate in about the same time . For instance , Peas would sprout as quick as Kidney Beans in equal temperature ; but Peas , being hardy , are generally planted a month earlier in the season . If Beans were planted ...
... growing , they would vegetate in about the same time . For instance , Peas would sprout as quick as Kidney Beans in equal temperature ; but Peas , being hardy , are generally planted a month earlier in the season . If Beans were planted ...
Page 21
... grow out of the reach of insects , but every good gardener should have his remedies at hand to apply to seed beds in general , and especially to those in which plants are raised for the purpose of being transplanted . Those species and ...
... grow out of the reach of insects , but every good gardener should have his remedies at hand to apply to seed beds in general , and especially to those in which plants are raised for the purpose of being transplanted . Those species and ...
Page 26
... grown Arti- choke is apparent by the opening of the scales ; and it should always be cut off before the flower appears in the centre ; the stem should be cut close to the ground at the same time . Artichokes are esteemed as a luxury by ...
... grown Arti- choke is apparent by the opening of the scales ; and it should always be cut off before the flower appears in the centre ; the stem should be cut close to the ground at the same time . Artichokes are esteemed as a luxury by ...
Page 33
... are next to Cucumbers and Melons for tenderness , and will always grow quicker and yield better , if the planting be delayed until settled warm weather . The Early Mohawk is the hardiest , and may sometimes succeed well , 33.
... are next to Cucumbers and Melons for tenderness , and will always grow quicker and yield better , if the planting be delayed until settled warm weather . The Early Mohawk is the hardiest , and may sometimes succeed well , 33.
Common terms and phrases
25th Congress Apple Apricot April Asparagus August Autumn Beans bearer beautiful beds berry weighing bloom blossoms Borecole branches Broccoli buds bulbs Cabbage catalogue Cauliflower Celery colour compost Corn Salad covered crimson crops cultivated delicious drills dung dwarf early earth Endive espaliers esteemed excellent feet flavour flesh flowers four fruit trees garden grafting green greenhouse ground grow growth hardy heat hot-bed inches deep insects juice juicy kinds larvæ leaves Lettuce lilac manure maturity medium melting month native Nectarine New-York oblong orange ounce pale Peach Pear Perennial perennial plants perfection pink plants Plum pots produce pruning purple Radish raised require rich ripe ripens roots rose rows Salsify scarlet Sea Kale Sea-Kale season seed seedling September shaded shoots shrubs skin soil sown species Spinach Spring Summer sweet tender transplanted Turnip varieties vegetable vines warm weather weeds Winter wood yellowish young
Popular passages
Page 139 - I COME, I come! ye have called me long, I come o'er the mountains with light and song; Ye may trace my step o'er the wakening earth, By the winds which tell of the violet's birth, By the primrose .stars in the shadowy grass, By the green leaves opening as I pass.
Page 168 - Farewell) a long farewell, to all my greatness ! This is the state of man : to-day he puts forth The tender leaves of hope ; to-morrow blossoms, And bears his blushing honors thick upon him : The third day, comes a frost, a killing frost ; And when he thinks, good easy man, full surely His greatness is a ripening, — nips his root, And then he falls, as I do.
Page 166 - Awake : The morning shines, and the fresh field Calls us ; we lose the prime, to mark how spring Our tender plants, how blows the citron grove, What drops the myrrh, and what the balmy reed, How nature paints her colours, how the bee Sits on the bloom extracting liquid sweet.
Page 334 - This table and the accompanying remarks are the result of many years' actual observation ; the whole being constructed on a due consideration of the attraction of the sun and moon in their several positions respecting the earth ; and will, by simple inspection, show the observer what kind of weather will most probably follow the entrance of the moon into any of her quarter», and that so near the truth as to be seldom or never found to fail.
Page 258 - that more than one hundred men during a siege, were kept alive for nearly two months, without any other sustenance than a little of this gum taken sometimes into the mouth, and suffered gradually to dissolve.
Page 164 - For thee, sweet month, the groves green liv'ries wear, If not the first, the fairest of the year ; For thee the Graces lead the dancing hours, And nature's ready pencil paints the flowers.
Page 113 - ... chocolate color, and it is then more apt to be confounded with other kinds of dubious quality ; but that species which most nearly resembles it, is slimy to the touch, and destitute of the...
Page 172 - She would now inspire none but delightful ideas, and therefore always makes her appearance in some amiable suit. Here stands a warrior clad with crimson ; there sits a magistrate robed in scarlet ; and yonder struts a pretty fellow, that seems to have dipped his plumes in the rainbow, and glitters in all the gay colours of that resplendent arch.
Page 171 - It needs no such attractions to render it the darling of the curious, being sufficiently engaging from the elegance of its figure, the radiant variety of its tinges, and a certain superior dignity of aspect.
Page 57 - March ; and towards the latter part of May, they should be planted in a rich, warm piece of ground, at the distance of two feet and a half asunder, every way, for the purple, or two feet for the white kind ; and if kept clean, and a little earth be drawn up to their stems, when about a foot high, they will produce plenty of fruit. Or, the seed may be sown about the end of April, on a warm border, and planted out finally the beginning of June ; but these will be rather late, and not produce fruit...