. The art of beautifying suburban home grounds of small extent; the advantages of suburban homes over city or country homes; the comfort and economy of neighboring improvements; the choice and treatment of building sites; and the best modes of laying out, planting, and keeping decorated grounds. Illustrated by upwards of two hundred plates and engravings ... With descriptions of the beautiful and hardy trees and shrubs grown in the United States . Landscape gardening; Suburban homes; Trees. DECIDUOUS TREMS. Fig. 105. 33a. soils, and attains its best proportions in such places. Loudon re- marks


. The art of beautifying suburban home grounds of small extent; the advantages of suburban homes over city or country homes; the comfort and economy of neighboring improvements; the choice and treatment of building sites; and the best modes of laying out, planting, and keeping decorated grounds. Illustrated by upwards of two hundred plates and engravings ... With descriptions of the beautiful and hardy trees and shrubs grown in the United States . Landscape gardening; Suburban homes; Trees. DECIDUOUS TREMS. Fig. 105. 33a. soils, and attains its best proportions in such places. Loudon re- marks of the European chestnut, Castanea vesca (pi which the American is classed as a variety only), " It will not thrive in stiff tenacious soil ; and in a rich loam its timber, and even its poles and hoops, are brittle and good for nothing. In loamy soils at the bottom of mountains, and in loam incumbent on clay, it attains a large size, and in so short a time, that, according to Sang, wherever the chestnut is planted in its proper soil and situation, it will outgrow any other tree in the same length of time, except per- haps the larch, the willow, and some of the poplars. According to Bosc it will not thrive in calcareous soil, but those lying over granite, gneiss, and schistus, and which are composed of the debris of these rocks, appear particularly suitable for it. It thrives well among rocks where there is apparently very little soil, insinuating itself among their fissures and chinks, and attaining a large ; "Wherever I have seen chestnut trees," observes the same author, "and I have seen them in a great many different localities, they were never on soils or on surfaces fit for the production of corn. On mountains in France, Switzerland, and Italy, the chestnut begins where the corn leaves off; and in climates suitable for corn, the iree is only found on' rocky or flinty ;. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectsuburbanhomes, bookye