The Kitchen Gardener's Instructor: Containing a Catalogue of Garden and Herb Seed ... |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 45
Page 20
... rows ; then dip others in tar , and pass them through into the floor of the burrows , being careful not to rub off the tar in the operation . Tar is also an effectual remedy against smut in wheat : after being heated in a kettle until ...
... rows ; then dip others in tar , and pass them through into the floor of the burrows , being careful not to rub off the tar in the operation . Tar is also an effectual remedy against smut in wheat : after being heated in a kettle until ...
Page 32
... row , from fourteen to sixteen inches wide , presuming that the rows are five feet apart , as directed . Then dig the surface of the beds lightly from trench to trench , burying the weeds , and as you proceed , gather the earth around ...
... row , from fourteen to sixteen inches wide , presuming that the rows are five feet apart , as directed . Then dig the surface of the beds lightly from trench to trench , burying the weeds , and as you proceed , gather the earth around ...
Page 35
... prepared into beds , allowing four feet for every four rows of plants , with alleys two feet and a half wide between each bed . Strain your line along the bed six inches from the edge ; then , with a spade , cut ASPARAGUS . 35.
... prepared into beds , allowing four feet for every four rows of plants , with alleys two feet and a half wide between each bed . Strain your line along the bed six inches from the edge ; then , with a spade , cut ASPARAGUS . 35.
Page 36
... rows , instead of twelve ; and by planting them in the quincunx manner , that is , by commencing the second row eight inches from the end of the first , and the fourth even with the second , the plants will form rhomboidal squares ...
... rows , instead of twelve ; and by planting them in the quincunx manner , that is , by commencing the second row eight inches from the end of the first , and the fourth even with the second , the plants will form rhomboidal squares ...
Page 40
... row , allowing the smallest sorts to be planted about two inches apart , and the largest four inches . The beans should be gathered young , and shelled while fresh . After having been washed , let them be boiled in plenty of water with ...
... row , allowing the smallest sorts to be planted about two inches apart , and the largest four inches . The beans should be gathered young , and shelled while fresh . After having been washed , let them be boiled in plenty of water with ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
25th Congress acre Allium April Artichokes Asparagus autumn Beans beds Beets boiled Borecole Broccoli bulbs Cabbage Cardoons Carrots Cauliflower Celery cellar climates cold compost Corn Salad covered crops Cucumbers cultivated drills dry weather dung Dwarf early earth Endive feet Fetticus flower frames free from weeds frequently frost fruit garden gathered green grow growth half-hardy plants hardy Head Lettuce heat herbs hills hoeing Hops hot-bed inches deep insects leaves Leek Lettuce manure March Melon moderate month mould Mushrooms Onion open ground ounce of seed Parsley Parsnip Peas perfection plants plough Potatoes pots prepared quantity Radish Radish seed raised require Rhubarb rich ground roots rows salad Salsify Sea-Kale season seed will produce Shallots Skirret soil soon sowing the seed spawn species Spinach spring stalks summer taken tender thick thin three inches three or four Tomato transplanted trees trenches Turnip twelve inches varieties warm border warm weather week winter
Popular passages
Page 146 - 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 127 - ... flat square bricks, which being done, set them on edge, and frequently turn them till half dry : then with a dibble make two or three holes in each brick, and insert in each hole a piece of good old spawn, the size of a common walnut ; the bricks should then remain till they are dry.
Page 127 - ... a gentle glow through the whole. When the spawn has spread itself through every part of the bricks the process is ended, and they may be laid up in any dry place for use. Mushroom spawn, made according to this receipt, will preserve its vegetating powers for many years, if well dried before it is laid up ; if moist, it will grow, and soon exhaust itself.
Page 67 - ... 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...
Page 36 - Strain your line along the bed six inches from the edge ; then with a spade cut out a small trench or drill close to the line, about six inches deep, making that side next the line nearly upright...
Page 48 - Cauliflower, it would be the most certain method of obtaining large and early flowers; but as only a part of these crops can be expected to come to perfection before, the approach of winter, the remainder will have to be taken up, laid in by the roots, and covered up with earth to the lower leaves in some sheltered situation, where they will come to more perfect maturity.
Page 129 - It is immaterial whether it be rich or not, the only use of earth here being for spawn to run and mass in. Now lay another course of droppings, and earth them over as above, when past a state of fermentation : then a third course, which, in like manner, earth all over. This finishes the bed, which will be a very strong and productive one if properly managed afterward. " Observe that, in forming the bed, it should be a little rounded, in order that the centre may not be more wet or moist than the...
Page 35 - It should have a large supply of well-rotted dung, three or four inches thick, and then be regularly trenched two spades deep, and the dung buried equally in each trench twelve or fifteen inches below the surface. When this trenching is done, lay two or three inches of...
Page 53 - Cauliflowers are sometimes produced from seed sown in a hotbed towards the end of January, or early in February. Great pains must be taken to have the bed in good condition to receive the seed. When the plants are up, they must have air every mild day, and as they progress in growth, they should have as much air as possible, consistent with their preservation ; but the beds must be kept covered up every night, as long as there is any danger of frost. When the plants are three or four inches high,...