Country Life: A Handbook of Agriculture, Horticulture, and Landscape GardeningDinsmoor and Company, 1866 - 912 oldal |
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1 - 5 találat összesen 100 találatból.
3. oldal
... necessary preliminary to the rest of the book , let me de- scribe the character of the estate upon which we are to suppose ourselves living , and which we are to cultivate . It shall have an area of 60 acres , of which about 20 are farm ...
... necessary preliminary to the rest of the book , let me de- scribe the character of the estate upon which we are to suppose ourselves living , and which we are to cultivate . It shall have an area of 60 acres , of which about 20 are farm ...
20. oldal
... necessary where they cross the entrance from the parlor , as the conservatory floor is there sufficiently above the level of the parlor floor to let the pipes pass under . The smoke flues traverse the walk along the front and return ...
... necessary where they cross the entrance from the parlor , as the conservatory floor is there sufficiently above the level of the parlor floor to let the pipes pass under . The smoke flues traverse the walk along the front and return ...
22. oldal
... necessary to have any artificial heat , and which ripens its crop in August and September . The left section is to be a retarding - house , whose fruit is to be fit for use in December , January , or February . The right side is a ...
... necessary to have any artificial heat , and which ripens its crop in August and September . The left section is to be a retarding - house , whose fruit is to be fit for use in December , January , or February . The right side is a ...
52. oldal
... necessary to convert 1 pound of water into vapor by sun evaporation is just as great as to convert it into steam over a fire , and that the fire heat contained in 2 or 3 ounces of coal is that amount . By consequence , then , were all ...
... necessary to convert 1 pound of water into vapor by sun evaporation is just as great as to convert it into steam over a fire , and that the fire heat contained in 2 or 3 ounces of coal is that amount . By consequence , then , were all ...
53. oldal
... necessary to their rapid growth , is taken away at the rate of 24 cwt . of burning coal per hour , whilst the plants are half frozen . " " It has been proved that the heat of a pound of water in a state of steam would raise the ...
... necessary to their rapid growth , is taken away at the rate of 24 cwt . of burning coal per hour , whilst the plants are half frozen . " " It has been proved that the heat of a pound of water in a state of steam would raise the ...
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Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
acre ammonia autumn Azalea beauty beds better Black Alder blossom bottom branches buds bulbs bushels Cardoons cold color compost conservatory Corn cover crimson crops cultivated culture deep drain early earth Endive espaliers evergreen fall farm farmer feet flower-garden flowers frost fruit garden give glass Grain grapery grapes Grass greenhouse ground grow grown growth guano hardy heat Heliotrope hotbeds Hybrid improved inches keep kind kitchen-garden land Lantana leaves lime loam manure moisture month nitrogen Noisette Norway Spruce peat Pelargoniums pipes plants plough pond potash pots pounds profit pruning removed rich ripen roots Roses rows sashes Sea-kale season seed sheep shoots shrubs side soil soon spring stones straw summer supply surface temperature tion trees Turnips varieties vegetable ventilation vines wall warm weather weeds winter wood yellow
Népszerű szakaszok
332. oldal - That hangs his head, and a' that ? The coward-slave, we pass him by, We dare be poor for a' that ! For a' that, and a' that, Our toils obscure, and a' that ; The rank is but the guinea stamp ; The man's the gowd for a
422. oldal - what is sauce for the goose, is sauce for the gander...
51. oldal - His thermometers were sunk in the soil only to the depth of -f^ of an inch. In that sunny clime he found the mean heat of soil, at that depth, to be at noon, for six successive months, 131°. If that were his mean heat for six months, we cannot doubt that it is frequently obtained as an extreme heat in the hottest portion of our year in England.
501. oldal - Ibs. of hay, or 200 cwt. of beet-root, which are the yearly produce of such a field ; but it is less than the straw, roots, and grain of corn, which might grow on the same surface, would contain...
445. oldal - ... seed, or manure. Thorough draining not only diminishes the cost of ploughing, but it renders it possible to grow great crops of roots — of mangold-wurzel from thirty to thirty-five tons an acre, and of turnips from twenty to twenty-five tons. Ten times more live stock is thus fed on the land than it maintained before. The corn crop follows the roots in due course without further manuring, and is made certain in addition, even in wet seasons. The well-shaped modern plough saves in...
49. oldal - Ib. of water by filtration, no effect is produced beyond what is due to the relative temperatures of the rain and of the soil. Mr. Dickenson, the eminent paper-maker, who has several mills and a considerable landed estate in Hertfordshire, has deduced from a series of observations, which are we believe entitled to great confidence, that of an annual fall of '26 in.
446. oldal - The whole live stock consisted of 200 sheep, and 40 cattle of the old Norfolk breed. He adopted what was then the new, now the old, and what is...
49. oldal - The proportions in which each of these means will operate will vary in every case, but this will be an universal feature, that these 11 inches will maintain in undrained retentive soils, at all except some accidental periods of excessive drought, a permanent supply of water of drainage, which will be in constant course of evaporation, and will constantly produce the cold consequent thereon. Retentive soils never can be so warm as porous, for a simple reason. Every one knows, or may know, that if...
50. oldal - To ascertain the mean heat of the air at the surface of the earth over any extended space, and for a period of eight or nine months, is no simple operation. More elements enter into such a calculation than we have space or ability to enumerate ; but we know certainly that, for seven months in the year, air, at the surface of the ground, is seldom lower than 48°, never much lower, and only for short periods ; whereas, at...