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Home Gardening Manual
Table of Contents
Gardening
chapter01 point of view what a garden is
chapter02 1 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 2 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 3 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 4 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 5 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 6 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 7 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 8 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 9 gardening plans and theory
chapter03 1 execution of landscape features
chapter03 2 execution of landscape features
chapter03 3 execution of landscape features
chapter03 4 execution of landscape features
chapter03 5 execution of landscape features
chapter04 1 handling the land
chapter04 2 handling the land
chapter04 3 handling the land
chapter04 4 handling the land
chapter04 5 handling the land
chapter05 1 handling the plants
chapter05 2 handling the plants
chapter05 3 handling the plants
chapter05 4 handling the plants
chapter05 5 handling the plants
chapter05 6 handling the plants
chapter05 7 handling the plants
chapter05 8 handling the plants
chapter05 9 handling the plants
chapter06 1 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 2 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 3 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 4 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 5 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 6 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 7 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 8 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 9 protecting plants from pests
chapter07 01 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 02 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 03 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 04 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 05 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 06 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 07 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 08 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 09 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 10 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 11 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 12 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 13 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 14 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 15 growing ornamental plants classes
flowers and flower gardens
flowers and flower gardens 01
flowers and flower gardens 02
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flowers and flower gardens notes

THE GROWING OF THE ORNAMENTAL PLANTS
THE CLASSES OF PLANTS, AND LISTS - Continued

The making of hedges.

Hedges are much less used in this country than in Europe, and for several reasons. Our climate is dry, and most hedges do not thrive so well here as there; labor is high-priced, and the trimming is therefore likely to be neglected; our farms are so large that much fencing is required; timber and wire are cheaper than live hedges.

However, hedges are used with good effect about the home grounds. In order to secure a good ornamental hedge, it is necessary to have a thoroughly well-prepared deep soil, to set the plants close, and to shear them at least twice every year. For evergreen hedges the most serviceable plant in general is the arbor vitae. The plants may be set at distances of 1 to 2-1/2 feet apart. For coarser hedges, the Norway spruce is used; and for still coarser ones, the Scotch and Austrian pines. In California the staple conifer hedge is made of Monterey cypress. For choice evergreen hedges about the grounds, particularly outside the northern states, some of the retinosporas are very useful. One of the most satisfactory of all coniferous plants for hedges is the common hemlock, which stands shearing well and makes a very soft and pleasing mass. The plants may be set from 2 to 4 feet apart.

Other plants that hold their leaves and are good for hedges are the common box and the privets. Box hedges are the best for very low borders about walks and flower-beds. The dwarf variety can be kept down to a height of 6 inches to a foot for any number of years. The larger-growing varieties make excellent hedges 3, 4, and 5 feet high. The ordinary privet or prim holds its leaves well into winter in the North. The so-called Californian privet holds its leaves rather longer and stands better along the seashore. The mahonia makes a low, loose hedge or edging in locations where it will thrive. Pyracantha is also to be recommended where hardy. In the southern states, nothing is better than Citrus trifoliata. This is hardy even farther north than Washington in very favored localities. In the South, Prunus Caroliniana is also used for hedges. Saltbush hedges are frequent in California.

For hedges of deciduous plants, the most common species are the buckthorn, Japan quince, the European hawthorn and other thorns, tamarix, osage orange, honey locust, and various kinds of roses. Osage orange has been the most used for farm hedges. For home grounds, Berberis Thunbergii makes an excellent free hedge; also Spiræa Thunbergii and other spireas. The common Rosa rugosa makes an attractive free hedge.

Hedges should be trimmed the year after they are set, although they should not be sheared very closely until they reach the desired or permanent height. Thereafter they should be cut into the desired form in spring or fall, or both. If the plants are allowed to grow for a year or two without trimming, they lose their lower leaves and become open and straggly. Osage orange and some other plants are plashed; that is, the plants are set at an angle rather than perpendicularly, and they are wired together obliquely in such a way that they make an impenetrable barrier just above the surface of the ground.

For closely clipped or sheared hedges, the best plants are arbor vitae, retinospora, hemlock, Norway spruce, privet, buckthorn, box, osage orange, pyracantha, Citrus trifoliata. The pyracantha (Pyracantha coccinea) is an evergreen shrub allied to cratægus, of which it is sometimes considered to be a species. It is also sometimes referred to cotoneaster. Although hardy in protected places in the North, it is essentially a bush of the middle and southern latitudes, and of California. It has persistent foliage and red berries. Var. Lalandi has orange-red berries.

The borders.

The word "border" is used to designate the heavy or continuous planting about the boundaries of a place, or along the walks and drives, or against the buildings, in distinction from planting on the lawn or in the interior spaces. A border receives different designations, depending on the kinds of plants that are grown therein: it may be a shrub-border, a flower-border, a hardy border for native and other plants, a vine-border, and the like.

There are three rules for the choosing of plants for a hardy border: choose (1) those that you like best, (2) those that are adapted to the climate and soil, (3) those that are in place or in keeping with that part of the grounds.

The earth for the border should be fertile. The whole ground should be plowed or spaded and the plants set irregularly in the space; or the back row may be set in a line. If the border is composed of shrubs, and is large, a horse cultivator may be run in and out between the plants for the first two or three years, since the shrubs will be set 2 to 4 feet apart. Ordinarily, however, the tilling is done with hand tools. After the plants are once established and the border is filled, it is best to dig up as little as possible, for the digging disturbs the roots and breaks the crowns. It is usually best to pull out the weeds and give the border a top-dressing each fall of well-rotted manure. If the ground is not very rich, an application of ashes or some commercial fertilizer may be given from time to time.

The border should be planted so thick as to allow the plants to run together, thereby giving one continuous effect. Most shrubs should be set 3 feet apart. Things as large as lilacs may go 4 feet and sometimes even more. Common herbaceous perennials, as bleeding heart, delphiniums, hollyhocks, and the like, should go from 12 to 18 inches. On the front edge of the border is a very excellent place for annual and tender flowering plants. Here, for example, one may make a fringe of asters, geraniums, coleus, or anything else he may choose. (Chap. II.)

Into the heavy borders about the boundaries of the place the autumn leaves will drift and afford an excellent mulch. If these borders are planted with shrubs, the leaves may be left there to decay, and not be raked off in the spring.

The general outline of the border facing the lawn should be more or less wavy or irregular, particularly if it is on the boundary of the place. Alongside a walk or drive the margins may follow the general directions of the walk or drive.

In making borders of perennial flowers the most satisfactory results are secured if a large clump of each kind or variety is grown. The herbaceous border is one of the most flexible parts of grounds, since it has no regular or formal design. Allow ample space for each perennial root,--often as much as three or four square feet,--and then if the space is not filled the first year or two, scatter over the area seeds of poppies, sweet peas, asters, gilias, alyssum, or other annuals. Figures 237-239, from Long ("Popular Gardening," i., 17, 18), suggest methods of making such borders. They are on a scale of ten feet to the inch. The entire surface is tilled, and the irregular diagrams designate the sizes of the clumps. The diagrams containing no names are to be filled with bulbs, annuals, and tender plants, if desired.

[Illustration: Fig. 237. Suggestions for a border of spring flowers.]

[Illustration: Fig. 238. A border of summer-flowering herbs.]

It must not be supposed, however, that one cannot have a border unless he has wide marginal spaces about his grounds. It is surprising how many things one can grow in an old fence. Perennials that grow in fence-rows in fields ought also to grow in similar boundaries on the home grounds. Some of garden annuals will thrive alongside a fence, particularly if the fence does not shut off too much light; and many vines (both perennial and annual) will cover it effectively. Among annuals, the large-seeded, quick-germinating, rapid-growing kinds will do best. Sunflower, sweet pea, morning glory, Japanese hop, zinnia, marigold, amaranths, four o'clock, are some of the kinds that will hold their own. If the effort is made to grow plants in such places, it is important to give them all the advantage possible early in the season, so that they will get well ahead of the grass and weeds. Spade up the ground all you can. Add a little quick-acting fertilizer. It is best to start the plants in pots or small boxes, so that they will be in advance of the weeds when they are set out.

[Illustration: Fig. 239. An autumn-flowering border.]

The flower-beds.

We must remember to distinguish two uses of flowers,--their part in a landscape design or picture, and their part in a bed or separate garden for bloom. We now consider the flower-bed proper; and we include in the flower-bed such "foliage" plants as coleus, celosia, croton, and canna, although the main object of the flower-bed is to produce an abundance of flowers.

In making a flower-bed, see that the ground is well drained; that the subsoil is deep; that the land is in a mellow and friable condition, and that it is fertile. Each fall it may have a mulch of rotted manure or of leafmold, which may be spaded under deeply in the spring; or the land may be spaded and left rough in the fall, which is a good practice when the soil has much clay. Make the flower-beds as broad as possible, so that the roots of the grass running in from either side will not meet beneath the flowers and rob the beds of food and moisture. It is well to add a little commercial fertilizer each fall or spring.

Although it is well to emphasize making the ground fertile, it must be remembered (as indicated at the close of Chap. IV) that it can easily be made too rich for such plants as we desire to keep within certain stature and for those from which we wish an abundance of bloom in a short season. In over-rich ground, nasturtiums and some other plants not only "run to vine," but the bloom lacks brilliancy. When it is the leaf and vegetation that is wanted, there is little danger of making the ground too rich, although it is possible to make the plant so succulent and sappy that it becomes sprawly or breaks down; and other plants may be crippled and crowded out.

There are various styles of flower-planting. The mixed border, planted with various hardy plants, and extending along either side of the garden-walk, was popular years ago; and, with modifications in position, form, and extent, has been a popular attachment to home grounds during the past few years. To produce the best effects the plants should be set close enough to cover the ground; and the selection should be such as to afford a continuity of bloom.

The mixed flower-bed may contain only tender summer-blooming plants, in which case the bed, made up mostly of annuals, does not purport to express the entire season.

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chapter08 01 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 02 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 03 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 04 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 05 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 06 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 07 growing ornamental plants instructions
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chapter08 21 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter09 1 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 2 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 3 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 4 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 5 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 6 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 7 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 8 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 9 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter10 1 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 2 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 3 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 4 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 5 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 6 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 7 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 8 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 9 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter11 1 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 2 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 3 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 4 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 5 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 6 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 7 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 8 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 9 gardening seasonal reminders

home vegetable gardening

home vegetable gardening contents

INTRODUCTION

WHY YOU SHOULD GARDEN

REQUISITES OF THE HOME VEGETABLE GARDEN

THE PLANTING PLAN

IMPLEMENTS AND THEIR USES

MANURES AND FERTILIZERS

THE SOIL AND ITS PREPARATION

STARTING THE PLANTS

SOWING AND PLANTING

THE CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES

THE VEGETABLES AND THEIR SPECIAL NEEDS - Root Crops

THE VEGETABLES AND THEIR SPECIAL NEEDS - Leaf Crops

THE VEGETABLES AND THEIR SPECIAL NEEDS - Fruit Crops

BEST VARIETIES OF THE GARDEN VEGETABLES

INSECTS AND DISEASE, AND METHODS OF FIGHTING THEM

HARVESTING AND STORING

THE VARIETIES OF POME AND STONE FRUITS

PLANTING; CULTIVATION; FILLER CROPS

PRUNING, SPRAYING, HARVESTING

BERRIES AND SMALL FRUITS

A CALENDAR OF OPERATIONS

Home Vegetable Gardening CONCLUSION

my summer in a garden

my summer in a garden 01

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my summer in a garden 22 calvin

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