. A dictionary of modern gardening. Gardening. DRI 203 ââ¦â DUN piece, to receive the seeds. The ope- rator holds it in his left hand, diracting the lower extremity to the line where he desires the seed to fall, and with the fingers of his right hand dropping the seeds into the funnel at the required rapidityâa little practice enables the sower to pass over the ground with speed, and perform the work with re- gularity. Fig. DRIMIA. Thirteen species. Green- house bulbs. Offsets. Sandy loam and peat. DROSERA. Nine species. Hardy and green-house aquatics. Seeds. Peat and water. DRUMMONDIA mi


. A dictionary of modern gardening. Gardening. DRI 203 ââ¦â DUN piece, to receive the seeds. The ope- rator holds it in his left hand, diracting the lower extremity to the line where he desires the seed to fall, and with the fingers of his right hand dropping the seeds into the funnel at the required rapidityâa little practice enables the sower to pass over the ground with speed, and perform the work with re- gularity. Fig. DRIMIA. Thirteen species. Green- house bulbs. Offsets. Sandy loam and peat. DROSERA. Nine species. Hardy and green-house aquatics. Seeds. Peat and water. DRUMMONDIA mitelloides. Hardy herbaceous. Division. Peat. DRYANDRA. Nineteen species. Green-house evergreen shrubs. Cut- tings. Turfy sandy loam and peat. DRYAS. Four species. Hardy ever- green trees. Seed and cuttings. Peat and loam. DRYMONIA. Two species. Stove evergreen climbers. Cuttings. Rich sandy loam. DRYPETES crocea. Stove ever- green shrub. Cuttings. Loam and peat. DRYPIS spinosa. Hardy evergreen shrub. Cuttings and seed. Sandy peat and loam. DRY-STOVE is a hot-house devoted to the culture of such plants as require a high degree of heat, but a drier at- mosphere than the tenants of the bark- stove. Consequently, fermenting mate- rials and open tanks of hot-water are inadmissible; but the sources of heat are either steam or hot-water pipes, or flues. See Stove. DUMASIA. Two species. Green- house evergreen twiners. Cuttings. Peat and sandy loam. DUMB-CANE Caladium sequinum. DUMERILIA paniculata. Stove evergreen shrub. Cuttings. Common soil. -â¢â¢lâ¢.lll^â¢liM^â¢â¢"»â â¢-""">"â *^ DUNG. Under this title our atten- tion must be confined to the faeces and urines of animals, and that one most common compound, stable dung. Night-soil is the richest of the ma- nures to be arranged under this head. It is composed of human faeces and urine, of which the constituents are as follows :â F-2ECES. Water Vegetable and animal remains 7 Bile


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, booksubjectgardening, bookyear18