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قراءة كتاب Gardening for Little Girls
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Any desert can be made to blossom as the rose,—if you only know how.
As to the third step, make the list of the seeds, bulbs, etc., that you would like, with the idea of having some flowers in bloom the whole summer long. If you are lucky enough to have a kind friend or neighbor give you of her store, they will probably be good and come up as they should. If you have to buy, though, be sure to go to a first-class, reliable dealer, for you don't want to waste your time and money on old things that won't grow.
Then last of all, decide on your planting from this list with a view to height and color, so that you will arrange to the best advantage,—the nasturtiums which climb, for instance, going to the back of the bed against wall or trellis, while the dwarf variety should be at the front.
BIG WORDS FOR COMMON THINGS
To select your flowers intelligently, though, you must know something about their nature, habits, and tendencies, and certain words always found in seed catalogues and garden books may be puzzling to a beginner.
a. Annuals, for example, are the plants that live but a year or a single season.
b. Biennials, however, continue for two years before they perish, making roots and leaves the first year and usually flowering the second.
c. Perennials are the kind that continue for more than two years.
d. Deciduous refers to the shrubs and trees that lose their leaves in the fall.
e. Evergreens are those that keep their verdure the whole year round.
f. Herbaceous plants may be annual, biennial or perennial, but they have a stem that does not become woody, and that dies down after flowering.
g. Hybrids are plants produced by "crossing," or mixing two distinct varieties.
PLANT NEEDS
All plant life, you must understand, requires five things,—WARMTH, LIGHT, AIR, WATER and FOOD. But plants differ as much as people, and some need more of one thing than they do of another. Some grow best in sunlight, others in the shade; some in sand, others in rich soil. You will have to find out what each kind requires. The food properties needed in the soil have some big names, too,—nitrogen, potash, and phosphoric acid, all of which are found in farm manures. If you can not conveniently get these, however, florists and seed-men can supply you with other fertilizers more easily handled.
THE SEED NURSERY
If you are just getting ready to start your garden, the annuals,—the plants that flower from seed the first season though they do not come up again,—will probably interest you most as they give the quickest returns. Many kinds can be started in the house in March, and for this purpose any kind of a shallow box will answer. Bore holes in the bottom and put in a layer of broken pottery or stones, to permit drainage, so the roots will not rot. Fill three or four inches deep with good soil, after pulverizing and taking out all sticks and stones.
RULES FOR INDOOR PLANTING
FAMILIAR ANNUALS
Even as early as March you can start in the boxes in this way any of the following annuals, which will bloom at the time mentioned or even earlier:—
EASILY GROWN PERENNIALS
Both the perennials and the biennials following should all blossom the first year if started in the house in March:—
Gaillardia, red, yellow. |
Forget-me-not, lovely blue. |
Larkspur, blue. |
Snapdragon, white, red, purple, yellow, pink. |
Sweet William, white, pink, red, maroon, plain, varigated. |
Coreopsis, yellow. |
Cupid's Dart, blue. |
Iceland Poppy, yellow, white, scarlet. |
Get as many as you can—and your space will permit,—of all the lovely old perennials and the bulbs that come up every season with little or no care. One of the oldest,—now deserted—farmhouses on Long Island, still carries in its dooryard the impress of some gentle flower-lover long since passed away, in its annual spring beauty of daffodils and lilies-of-the-valley. And the few bulbs and pips transplanted from there to my own garden, have thrived and spread so profusely that I, too, can pass them on to others.
HARDY FLOWERS ALL SUMMER
With carefully chosen bulbs and perennials alone, it is possible to have a succession of lovely blooms. In March your heart will be made happy with snowdrop and crocus; in April with violet, daffodil, narcissus, hyacinth and tulip; in May and June with spirea, peony, iris, forget-me-not, columbine, baby's breath, bleeding heart, mountain pink, candytuft, Chinese pink; in July and August, golden glow, hollyhock, larkspur, hardy phlox, snap-dragon; September and October, sunflower, dahlia, gladiolus and aster, with November closing the season with