. Paxton's Magazine of Botany and Register of Flowering Plants. are cnltivated. By keeping them in a perpetual current ofair for the present and the succeeding month, they will not be so likely to takemildew. Syringing should be still pursued, though with less vigour. Additional sowings of annuals may be made; should be layered, ifthey have not yet been done; Chrysanthemums must be tied to stakes as theirStems grow, but only three or four of the strongest stems should be retained ; theflowers of choice Dahlias can be thinned, to render the remaining ones finer;seedling Dahlias ough


. Paxton's Magazine of Botany and Register of Flowering Plants. are cnltivated. By keeping them in a perpetual current ofair for the present and the succeeding month, they will not be so likely to takemildew. Syringing should be still pursued, though with less vigour. Additional sowings of annuals may be made; should be layered, ifthey have not yet been done; Chrysanthemums must be tied to stakes as theirStems grow, but only three or four of the strongest stems should be retained ; theflowers of choice Dahlias can be thinned, to render the remaining ones finer;seedling Dahlias ought to be thrown away as soon as they ai-c proved valueless,being great exhausters of the soil; Pelargoniums should have their growth cherishedby a little warmth and atmos)dicric moisture ; the flower-stems of herbaceous plantsare to be cut off as they die; Ixias and other Cape bulbs must be kept graduallyless moist; Box-edgings and other evergreen hedges may be clijiped; and vacantbeds can be turned over before being re-filled, but they should not be


Size: 1567px × 1595px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, bookidpaxtonsmagazineo08pa, rose