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قراءة كتاب Amateur Gardencraft: A Book for the Home-Maker and Garden Lover
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Amateur Gardencraft: A Book for the Home-Maker and Garden Lover
have written from the standpoint of the amateur, for other amateurs who would make the improvement of the home-grounds a pleasure and a means of relaxation rather than a source of profit in a financial sense, believing that what I have to say will commend itself to the non-professional gardener as sensible, practical, and helpful, and strictly in line with the things he needs to know when he gets down to actual work.
I have also tried to make it plain that much of which goes to the making of the home is not out of reach of the man of humble means—that it is possible for the laboring man to have a home as truly beautiful in the best sense of the term as the man can have who has any amount of money to spend—that it is not the money that we put into it that counts so much as the love for it and the desire to take advantage of every chance for improvement. Home, for home's sake, is the idea that should govern. Money can hire the work done, but it cannot infuse into the result the satisfaction that comes to the man who is his own home-maker.
But not every person who reads this book will be a home-maker in the sense spoken of above. It will come into the hands of those who have homes about which improvements have already been made by themselves or others, but who take delight in the cultivation of shrubs and plants because of love for them. Many of these persons get a great deal of pleasure out of experimenting with them. Others do not care to spend time in experiments, but would be glad to find a short cut to success. To such this book will make a strong appeal, for I feel confident it will help them to achieve success in gardening operations that are new to them if they follow the instruction to be found in its pages. I have not attempted to tell all about gardening, for there is much about it that I have yet to learn. I expect to keep on learning as long as I live, for there is always more and more for us to find out about it. That's one of its charms. But I have sought to impart the fundamental principles of it as I have arrived at a knowledge of them, from many years of labor among trees, and shrubs, and flowers—a labor of love—and it is with a sincere hope that I have not failed in my purpose that I give this book to
The Home-Maker and the Garden-Lover.
CONTENTS
PAGE | |
The Lawn: How to Make It and How to Take Care of It | 17 |
Planting the Lawn | 34 |
Shrubs | 49 |
Vines | 68 |
The Hardy Border | 81 |
The Garden of Annuals | 97 |
The Bulb Garden | 116 |
The Rose: Its General Care and Culture | 128 |
The Rose as a Summer Bedder | 149 |
The Dahlia | 156 |
The Gladiolus | 166 |
Lilies | 172 |
Plants for Special Purposes | 176 |
Arbors, Summer-Houses, Pergolas, and other Garden Features | 189 |
Carpet-Bedding | 205 |
Flowering and Foliage Plants for Edging Beds and Walks | 216 |
Planning the Garden | 223 |
The Back-Yard Garden | 220 |
The Wild Garden | 234 |
The Winter Garden | 243 |
Window and Veranda |