コンテンツにスキップ

ファイル:Florists' review (microform) (16061937103).jpg

ページのコンテンツが他言語でサポートされていません。

元のファイル(2,614 × 680 ピクセル、ファイルサイズ: 316キロバイト、MIME タイプ: image/jpeg)

概要

解説
English:

Title: Florists' review (microform)
Identifier: 5205536_26_2 (find matches)
Year: [1] (s)
Authors:
Subjects: Floriculture
Publisher: Chicago : Florists' Pub. Co
Contributing Library: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Digitizing Sponsor: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Images: All Images From Book
Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.

Text Appearing Before Image:
Sim-BUBBR 29, 1910. The Weekly Florists^ Review^
Text Appearing After Image:
THE FORCING OF BULBS. (A paper by Alex. R. Wllkle, of Outremont, .Montreal, Can., read at a meeting of the Mon- ireal Gardeners' and Florists' Club, March 7, 1910.) To force bulbs successfully, we want the right compost or soil. Three parts f^food loam to one part dried cow manure, imd a dash of sharp sand to keep the whole open, is a good mixture. Of course, old carnation soil or mum soil, with a little fresh loam mixed, will answer the purpose if difficulty is experienced in >retting the first mentioned compost. Next we must have good bulbs. Good bulbs are half the battle. Do not get <heap varieties and think you are making a bargain. We cannot expect to get first-class flowers from third-sized bulbs. There is not a great difference between first and second sizes; you can get nearly as good blooms from seconds as you can from firsts, but avoid No. 3, if you wish to be successful and have a creditable show for your money. I shall speak first of daffodils, narcissi, tulips and hyacinths. They all come along together, as it were, and the same sort of treatment will answer. We gen- erally get our bulbs in from Holland dur- ing October and the early part of No- vember. Treatment on Arrival. Where some people make a mistake right at the start is by leaving the bulbs lying around for days, and perhaps weeks, before getting them potted or boxed. They ought to be handled as soon as they arrive. Then, after being potted or placed in flats, they should be given as much water as the soil will take, and kept moist until stored away in cold- frames or bulb sheds. My purpose in watering thoroughly as soon as potted is to plump up the bulbs and put them in a good growing condition. Now the question follows, what is the best method of storing bulbs for forcing? Different growers have different opinions about this, but I should advocate the coldframes, or, better still, digging trenches and covering with wood and lit- ter, to keep them dark until the root growth has advanced far enough to be able to supply food to perfect the blooms. It takes about four weeks to root nar- 'issi, tulips and daflFodils, and a little longer to root hyacinths. A Succession of Hyacinths. French grown Boman hyacinths can be had in bloom during November, until Christmas, with the Dutch Boman minia- tures, in different colors, to follow. Some good doers are: L'Innocence and La (Jrandesse, white; Gigantea and Ger trude, pink; Charles Dickens, Grand Maitre and Czar Peter, blue. The dou- ble varieties come in well afterward, such as Prince of Orange, Princess Alexandra and Frederick the Great, red; La Grand- ewe, Princess Alice and Miss Night- ingale, white; Lord Wellington and Bem- brandt, blue; Bouquet d'Orange, Goethe and Ophir d'Or, yellow. Paper White narcissi are the earliest of their class and can be had nicely in flower by the first week in December. They do not like too strong a heat until the flower spikes are showing. After that they should have a temperature of 60 to 70 degrees until showing color; then the temperature should be reduced to 50 or 55 degrees, or they will get leggy and will not have much substance. Paper White is about the only narcissus that is forced in quantity before New Year's. Tulips and Daffodils. In tulips, Proserpine (pink), Yellow Prince and Chrysolora can be got in for Christmas fairly well. Then follow King of the Yellows, White Swan, White Hawk, Eembrandt (scarlet). Belle Al- liance, La Eeine (pink), Murillo (double pink), Ophir d'Or, Salvator, etc. Daffodils for succession from January 1 are: Trumpet Major, Von Sion, Golden Spur, Bicolor Victoria, Empress, Horsfieldii and Emperor. I may mention that Narcissus poeticus ornatus does not force successfully before the third week in January. All the aforesaid can be forced inside three weeks from the time of putting Easter Lilies. A few words now about liliums. At- tempts have been made over aad over again to keep Ulium bulbs im cold storage until November ani then force right from the start. Some growers seem to think that by so doing they prevent the disease from hav- ing time to develop, but neither do the plants have time to develop. Lilium bulbs, to get the best results, must be permitted to take their own time for the first six weeks, more or less. To allow for this, the bulbs must be potted up as soon as received in September, and put into a coldframe until well rooted. Then you can weed out all showing signs of disease when housing. This plan gives you the chance to put in a cold storage batch of bulbs to make up your number, if the early potted lot are not up to the standard. The early batch can be brought in for Easter, say the first week in April, in a temperature of 50 degrees, while the cold storage lot require a temperature never under 60 degrees, and up to 90 degrees, to get them out for the same time. Now, it stands to reason that the bulbs treated naturally and brought along gently will be the best at the finish, while those forced in a high temperature will be weak

Note About Images

Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.
日付
原典

https://www.flickr.com/photos/internetarchivebookimages/16061937103/

作者 Internet Archive Book Images
許可
(ファイルの再利用)
At the time of upload, the image license was automatically confirmed using the Flickr API. For more information see Flickr API detail.
Flickr tags
InfoField
  • bookid:5205536_26_2
  • bookyear:
  • bookdecade:
  • bookcentury:
  • booksubject:Floriculture
  • bookpublisher:Chicago_Florists_Pub_Co
  • bookcontributor:University_of_Illinois_Urbana_Champaign
  • booksponsor:University_of_Illinois_Urbana_Champaign
  • bookleafnumber:378
  • bookcollection:microfilm
  • BHL Collection



ライセンス

この画像はFlickrのThe Commonsから提供されています。Flickrにアップロードした組織は次のような理由などから「著作権上の制限無し」と分類することがあります。
  1. 著作権の保護期間が満了しているため、パブリックドメインの状態に置かれている。
  2. (著作権保護を得るための著作権表示が)必要な形式や条件に沿うことができていないなど、1. 以外の理由でパブリックドメインに置かれている。
  3. アップロードした組織が著作権を保持するが、著作権の行使に興味が無い。
  4. アップロードした組織が、制限無しに著作物を利用することを他者に許可するのに十分な法的権利を有する。

詳しい情報は https://flickr.com/commons/usage/ をご覧ください。


著作権の状態について明確な情報を決定できる場合は更なる著作権タグを追加してください。詳しくはCommons:ライセンシングをご覧ください。
この画像は当初、Internet Archive Book Images によって Flickrhttps://flickr.com/photos/126377022@N07/16061937103 に投稿されたものです。2015-09-21、FlickreviewR ボットによってレビューされ、No known copyright restrictions のライセンスで提供されていることが確認されました。

2015年9月21日

キャプション

このファイルの内容を1行で記述してください

このファイルに描写されている項目

題材

1 3 2015

ファイルの履歴

過去の版のファイルを表示するには、その版の日時をクリックしてください。

日付と時刻サムネイル寸法利用者コメント
現在の版2015年9月21日 (月) 06:582015年9月21日 (月) 06:58時点における版のサムネイル2,614 × 680 (316キロバイト)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{information |description={{en|1=<br> '''Title''': Florists' review (microform)<br> '''Identifier''': 5205536_26_2 ([https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3ASearch&profile=default&fulltext=Search&search=insourc...

このファイルを使用しているページはありません。