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قراءة كتاب Small Gardens, and How to Make the Most of Them

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Small Gardens, and How to Make the Most of Them

Small Gardens, and How to Make the Most of Them

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 4

align="center">The Management of Room Plants

Best kinds for “roughing it”—Importance of cleanliness—The proper way of watering them.   CHAPTER XVIII Various Hints Artificial manures—Labelling—Cutting off dead flowers—Buying plants—Tidiness in the garden, etc.

 

 


TERMS USED BY GARDENERS

Mulching—Term used for applying manure in a thick layer round the roots of shrubs, as a protection from frost.

Pricking off—Transplanting seedlings into separate pots.

“Eyes”—Incipient leaf-buds.

“Heel”—The hardened part of a cutting, formed where it is joined to the original plant.

Annual—Lasting one year.

Biennial—Lasting two years.

Perennial—Lasting several years.

Herbaceous—Term applied to plants which die down completely every winter.

Deciduous—Not ever-green; this term is applied to trees the leaves of which fall off every autumn.

Suckers—Shoots that spring up from the common stock, as distinct from those which belong to the engrafted portion.

Pegging down—Bending branches down close to the ground, and securing them with a peg.

Runners—Separate little plants, issuing from the parent, and ultimately rooting for themselves.

Spit—A spade’s depth.

“Strike”—A term applied to cuttings making roots.

Pinching out—Rubbing off undesirable shoots.

“Blind”—A term applied to plants which turn out flowerless.

Heeling in—The process of temporarily covering plants with soil, till the weather is suitable for setting them out in their permanent quarters.

Carpet-bedding—The geometrical arrangement of plants.

 

 


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BARR’S
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