moana 001967536] Gardening for Pleasure. A GUIDE TO THE AMATEUR IN THE FRUIT, VEGETABLE, AND FLOWER GARDEN, WITH FULL DIRECTIONS FOR THE GREENHOUSE, CONSERVATORY, AND WINDOW-GARDEN. / BY PETER HENDERSON, AUTHOR OF “GARDENING FOR PROFIT,”’ AND *“* PRACTICAL FLORICULTURE,” JERSEY CITY HEIGHTS, N. J. ILLUSTRATED. NEW YORE: NASH ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, ~ 245 BROADWAY. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 18%5, by the ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. LT CONTENTS. Introduction eeeceeeeCeeetrsee8 e086 @eeeeeeceseesneseseeseeeeee #8 e@eeoceceaeseeesseee see eset 4 CHAPTER I. Sth aHG LOCAION oto 23ss0cncs cue : Seca tere Seaoaees os ue eas aeean palatial aa 3125 - 9 ; CHAPTER I. EU RPSUNIE MRC oa ale onic Garni cratn cin a als a 6 ole acarchale palo, yp Metalasarmisigse 018in) g Gavel tanec odes alaeepae 10 : CHAPTER III. Preparation of' the Grouna oo... 2.02 0-cosc5 owe douse oe bana eeiats PES HREM Rt 13 CHAPTER IV. IN AERO IS eh eo a a aiatalg Ul eaale <'s. 0 since SOR SCENE pian Siaisiias NO Sime ate alam eds as 14 CHAPTER V. DERWNEGSS bu adais s codans veeeltsseatonaeese Sas atavaintslaite: di tanials, & aera nlatin’a aie cos, oie Nabe 16 CHAPTER VI. How to Use Concentrated Fertilizers: 25.22.62 «5 wcdecsc'aciewoum oe bene Goceae oes 18 CHAPTER VII. special Fertilizers for Particular Planta2>. 0089 20%. conc si--oSeens choteeecccs 21 CHAPTER VIII ELUEN DS 21 Ren Re En Ace iene ne ae een Aa a eM ee ee En 22 CHAPTER IX. ES AIEEE ROE GAD UCME Feats S535 0 ck ne ae Be Ree Eee ore ws Sos tI a % ; CHAPTER X. Blanting of Lawns and: Flower-Bedse. 5 2. 52s ont ho oo cd bakin nccclecwe Soa ceske 380 CHAPTER XI. Pail, or Holland: Bulbs. .oo6s.cfagoses. Sek aeiniaharetsiese Esie'si? alsweiove )a e4 sia'aidin o.anialnines-4 =< 42 CHAPTER XIV. : Propagating by FYOPUN 5 p> 5200 - scree nen ea ce ee de Sees aie ee: Maisto 2 ase 46 CHAPTER XV. About Grafting and Budding....... ... lense cece eccec ec eceee senecceccceecoes 47 CHAPTER XVI. How Grafting and Budding are Done........ 2... 2... sce cece eee eeee eee ees 51 (3) IV GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. CHAPTER XVII. Treatment of Tropical Bulbs, Seeds, etc.........-..--+0. ee omeys oer oreia Misleapeeee 57 CHAPTER XVIII. The Potting of Plants...........0eeceenee eee c tees ceeeeeee eens ceeeseceneerers 60 CHAPTER XIX. Winter Flowering Plants....... Sade aie oa a es “Na abies ova. = itveleiatetote ore mietaketsters 62 CHAPTER XxX. Unhealthy Plants—The Remedy . <3 c00-0c 5-0 s- se's cos - dino een vesemnieei Renee 6% CHAPTER XXI. Planta Suited fOr Summer DecOratioNn >...» < oi... vee sso secgne seemed eens 69 CHAPTER XXII. Hanging Baskets. .....0.....eceeeeee reece eeenee oe shoes sem Sabet cme sree "2 CHAPTER XXIII. Window Gardening............++e+eeeeees eee She oasis bh eis e'e/ainie seta) e' ee eee %5 CHAPTER XXIV. Parlor Gardening, or the Cultivation of Plants in Rooms...............+-..++ U7 | CHAPTER XXV. Wardian Cases; Fernerices, dardinicres. 2. 5. .0.cc 20st i sees ces ce er saceseeie nn 82 CHAPTER XXYVI. Wanter-Porcin’ the Lily of the Valley ono oe co es ok cence © « eet 84 CHAPTER XXVII. Greenhouses Attached to Dwellines, 3s: cc. cee accicw cnet sansa ces oan en enn 8% CHAPTER XXVIII. ACD ctached Greenhouse Or Grapery a'aje's a'ore de dw seg Sainte sp in einialcem SN ee ee A ee 188 CHAPTER XLVI OME MEAD OLY ra oisia cowie a Goin sw to rain epee eiciahe cee ad ce ee a 144 CHAPTER XLVII. The iGt-House-or Horcing Grapery - 24.2 toons cals sais cocaine ss hee a ace 150 CHAPTER XLYVIII. BP He Ska DOLLY 6 cH ood tice sikercte micie see siete arora alas Oats get aan Re piles cee ees 153 CHAPTER XLIX. Cottaze-Gardening—A Dicression is... 0. .e aso. sceadeans orcdescsoadavees 175 CHAPTER L. The Verctable: Gardeny. 5. .< ome ose gs o's ina scr taco clviav cciew cisieeteniele see 177% CHAPTER LI. Garden Implements.......... £ DEBI SRNR Sone ei epog He ate oases OE Ae 223 Monthly Calendar of Operations...325./0.-0.0.0.she seeriinncassenteterses +284 * aa G a" “eres Sy dels vee =. e S es a “ “_e age aa Pa 7 war os oe a | PY eerie Ml wy EL Le 7 Sagara lky ict ea a : . 7 5 adh niet ete le A | wpe ee mm. Ch ee 2 Chai ee ee wire pot a et a oe ae et BTL Pp ee aye So oy 5 Pe; 1) gt tere ta ~ “ “oe feyeaxs PL oem ing wl dre die S ts: B arr Wpes, ONE OR se he Po ee fe = = eae anos (cee E OS) Oo te 2s ak ke. ae er ae Yeas ie’ 3 IN TEO DUC ELON. Oe I have endeavored in writing ‘‘ Gardening for Pleasure,” to divest it, as faras I was competent to do so, of the technical terms and phrases which professional gar- deners use in writing or talking on matters relating to horticulture ; and to use the plainest language at my command in describing the simplest methods of culture. Whether I have succeeded in making the subject as clear as I have desired to do, those who read the work must decide. My aim in writing the book was to make it such as would be useful to the occupant of a city lot, or to the possessor of a few window plants, as well as to the owner of a country residence that is fully appointed in all mat- ters relating to the cultivation of flowers, fruits, and vegetables. ‘The necessity for such a book has been made evident to me by the inquiries from hundreds of ama- teurs in gardening ; inquiries to many of which neither of my previous works, (‘‘Gardening for Profit,” or ‘* Practical Floriculture,”) furnished proper replies ; the one being written mainly for information of the vegetable market gardener, and the other for the commercial florist. PETER HENDERSON. JERSEY City, N.J., Oct., 1875. (7) * = ‘etree Senha: Ke tise LS 7 pie es Gardening for Pleasure. CHAPTER L SOIL AND LOCATION. It is rare in determining the site for a residence, that the soil is taken into consideration, and in consequence, we sometimes find that the garden surrounding the house presents a barren appearance, that nothing can remedy short of the placing a foot of good soil over the whole surface. ‘This condition is not so often due to the natural poverty of the soil, as caused by grading off the surface soil, or by filling up to the desired grade with the material thrown out in excavating the cellars, or other subsoil, clay, or gravelly material, and placing these over the soil intended for the garden. This is often done for the convenience of contractors, to the great injury of the proprietor, without either being aware of the bad results. As a good soil will tend more than all else to give satisfactory results in garden opera- tions, it is all important to secure it. When discretion can be used in deciding on a location, one should be chosen that has naturally a suitable soil, rather than to attempt to make it so by carting a foot of good soil over the bad, which would be found not only very expensive, but in many situations,.next to impracticable. I have (9) 10 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. before said, in some of my writings on this subject, that the soil best suited for all garden purposes, is what is known as ‘‘sandy loam,” not less than ten inches deep, overlying a subsoil of sand or gravel. Such a soil rarely requires drainage, is easier worked, and gives bet- ter results than that known as ‘clayey loam,” which overlays a putty-like subsoil of blue or yellow clay, which must be drained thoroughly before a seed is sown or plant set out, or there will be no satisfactory reward for the labor. ‘The location, if choice can be made, should be such as will allow the garden to slope gently, (say one foot in a hundred), to the south or south-east, and if protected by hills or timber to the north-west, so much the better. If not protected naturally, a hedge of Hemlock Spruce, or Norway Firs, planted on the northern and western side of the site intended for the garden, would be of great advantage. These evergreens can be bought from 2 to 3 feet high, at from $15 to $25 per 100; and should be planted according to size, from 2 to 3 feet apart, making a cheap and ever improving screen or fence, which may be trimmed to any required hight or thickness. CHAPTER IL. DRAINAGE. As drainage will be in many instances indispensable to success, I will briefly state a few of the simplest methods that may be adopted, premising that it is utterly useless to expect to cultivate any soil satisfactorily that does not freely and rapidly carry off the surface water. An expert in soils can determine almost to a certainty by digging down two or three feet, whether or not a soil DRAINAGE. 11 requires drainage, but the safest guide for the inexperi- enced is to judge by the growing crops in his neighbor- hood. If on a similar soil good crops of corn, pota- toes, or hay, are found on undrain- ed soil, then it is certain there is no necessity to drain, for no matter how cultivated, or how heavily ma- - nured land is, there can never be a good crop raised in any season, if the soil is water-logged. If the place to be drained is of large ex- tent, and the ground nearly level, it will always be safer to call in the services of an engineer to give the proper levels and indicate the necessary fall, which should never be less than half a foot in the hundred, and if more can be had, so much the better. In heavy, clayey soils, we make our lateral drains three feet deep and fifteen feet apart, where there is less clay in the subsoil, we make them from twenty to thirty feet apart, and four feet deep. If stones are plenty on the ground, they may be profitably used in filling up the excavated ditch to half its depth, as shown in figure 1, and which is known as a SSSSSSSSS—_E Sas | ed Shes 4 i poet wd tas Saf) ee ee maller at top, and covering over with inverted sods, to ceep the soil from being washed in among the stones, and thus choking up the drain. But when they can be obtained at reasonable price, the best and most durable draining is that done by tiles. It makes but little dif- ference whether the tile used is the round with collars, 12 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. or the horse-shoe ; we rather prefer the latter, particu- larly if the bottom of the drain is ‘‘ spongy ;” we then use a board for the bottom of the drain, as shown in fig- ure 2. This board is a common one of hemlock or spruce, cut in four pieces ; it is ripped through the mid- dle, and then these parts split in two, making boards of five inches wide by half an inch in thickness, thus making the common hemlock board stretch out to a length of fifty feet. It is often a very troublesome mat- ter to get the few drain tiles necessary to drain a small garden, and in such cases an excellent and cheap substi- tute can be had by using one of boards. ‘Take ordinary rough boards, pine, hemlock, or spruce, and cut them into widths of three or four inches, nail them together so as to Fig. 3.—TRIANGULAR BOARD DRAIN. form a triangular pipe, as represented in figure 3, taking care to ‘‘ break the joints” in putting the lengths to- gether; care must be taken that the boards are not nailed together too closely, else they might swell so as to prevent the water passing into the drain to be carried off. ‘These drains are usually set with a flat side down, but they will keep clear better, if put with a point down, though it is more trouble to lay them. Drains made in this way will last much longer than might be supposed. Last season I came across some wooden drains that I had put down over twenty years before, and they seemed sound enough to last twenty years longer. PREPARATION OF THE GROUND. 13 CHAPTER III. PREPARATION OF THE GROUND After draining, (if draining is necessary), comes the preparation of the soil. Presuming that the ground where the new garden is to be made is an open space, clear of trees or other obstructions, there is no cultiva- tion so cheap and yet so thorough, as plowing and har- rowing. ‘To do this properly, the ordinary plow should be followed by the subsoil plow, stirring the subsoil up about fifteen inches deep, so that the water will pass through to the drains, natural or artificial, freely. After the plow and subsoiler, follows the harrow, which should be weighted, so that the teeth sink six inches into the soil, in order to completely pulverize it. In Europe, it would be considered sacrilege to use a plow or harrow in the preparation of a private garden, and most of old- country gardeners among us will stand aghast at such ad- vice, but I have been through all parts of the work, and am well satisfied, from no limited practice, that plowing and harrowing will not only do the work at one-fourth of the cost, but in a better manner than the ordinary digging or trenching with the spade. Let me here cau- tion that great care be taken never to plow, dig, harrow, rake, or hoe ground when wet; if work must be done, pull out weeds, or set plants, if you will, but never, under any circumstances, stir the soil in preparation for a crop until it is dry enough not to clog. If stirred while wet, the particles stick together, and the crop is not only in- jured for the season, but in some soils the bad effects show for years. 14 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. CHAPTER IV. WALKS. It is no unusual thing to see the owner of a neat cot- tage make himself perfectly ridiculous by the way in which he lays out the walk from the street to his front door. ‘There is a prevailing opinion that such walks should be curved ones, and gentlemen, often otherwise shrewd and intelligent, place themselves without question in the hands of some self-styled ‘“‘garden architect,” and thus manage to make themselves the laughing stock of a neighborhood. There was a well marked instance of this in a garden occupying a block in almost the cen- ter of Jersey City, where a man pretending to have a full knowledge of the subject, induced the proprietor to have a walk running about one hundred yards from the street to the house, made so curved that its length was nearly twice that distance. It was hard on the butcher’s and grocer’s boys, and it was said that even book-peddlers and sewing-machine agents, and lightning-rod men, looked ruefully at it and left him in peace. Some old authority on this subject says, that there ‘‘never should be any deviation from a straight line unless from some real or apparent cause.” So if curved lines are insisted on, a tree, rock, or building must be placed at the bend as a reason for going around such obstacles. It will be evi- dent to any one who reflects upon the matter, that a curved walk running a distance of a hundred yards or so from the street to the house, across an unplanted lawn, is utterly absurd. All short foot-walks from the street to the house should be straight, entering from the street at as near right angles as possible, and leading direct to the front door. There should be no necessity for a carriage road to the front entrance of a house, unless it is distant WALKS. 15 at least 100 feet from the street, and then a drive is best made by having an entrance at each side of the lot, as given in figure 4, presuming that the width of the ground is 500 feet, and the distance from street to the front door is 150 feet. Even here the foot-walk should be direct. The width of the roads or walks must be governed by the extent of the grounds. For carriage- way the width should not be less than ten feet, and for foot-walks, five feet. Nothing is more annoying than to: have a shower-bath in early morning from the dew from 4 HOUSE: j —— STREET Fig. 4.—APPROACH TO A HOUSE—DRIVE AND PATH. an overhanging branch in your narrow walk. We often see gardens of considerable pretentions where the walks are not more than three feet wide, where it is utterly im- possible for two persons to walk abreast without getting their dresses torn or faces scratched by overhanging branches. Besides, it argues a narrowness in the owner, particularly if the grounds are at all extensive, and looks as if he were determined to cultivate every available foot of land. Of course it is another matter when the garden plot is limited to the width of a city lot, (20 or 25 feet) ; then such economy of space is per- fectly excusable. The character of the soil must in a great measure determine the manner of making the road. Every one must have noticed that after a heavy rain, un- paved streets in some districts remain next to impassable for many hours, while in others, after the same amount 16 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. of rain, the roads will seem firm and comparatively dry. In the former all carriage roads, and even foot-walks, to have any satisfaction from them, should have their founda- tions formed something like that shown in figure 5; this gives thorough drainage for the water at each side, and a depth of from one foot at center to two feet on sides of rubble stone and gravel to form the bed of the road or walk ; but in nee or te! soils, ibe which the Ne SS Fig. 5.—SECTION OF ROAD WITH DRAIN EACH SIDE. water passes quickly, no such expense is necessary, as an equally good road may be made by five or six inches of gravel. In foot-walks on such soils, I have found that three or four inches of gravel mixed with one fourth its bulk of cement to ‘‘bind,” when watered and well rolled, makes an excellent smooth walk, and one in which, be- cause of its hardness, there is no trouble with weeds. CHAPTER. V. MANURES. Whether one wishes to cultivate vegetables, fruits, or flowers, all soils, to give good results, sooner or later need manure ; this is more particularly the case with what are known as ‘‘ vegetables,” these being usually quick grow- ing, succulent plants. No ‘‘ fertilizer” answers so well for all purposes as thoroughly decayed stable manure, whether from horse or cow stable, it makes but little dif- ference, except that that from the horse stables is best suited for heavy soils, while that from the cow-stables MANURES. : i, suits best for light soils. The quantity used for vegeta- bles should not be less than would cover the whole sur- face of the ground at least three inches deep, and it should be mixed with the soil as thoroughly as possible by plowing or spading. In the absence of stable manure, recourse must be had to concentrated fertilizers, the best of which are Peruvian guano and bone dust. Here a word of caution is necessary as to the quantity to be used; as their fertilizing qualities are concentrated, instead of being diffused asin stable manure; if either guano or bone dust, or fertilizers of similar character, come di- rectly in contact in large quantities, with the roots of plants, it injures them beyond remedy, hence in the use of these the necessity for caution. In our large field practice in vegetable growing, we use about 2,000 lbs. per acre of guano, sowing it on the surface of the ground after plowing, and then harrowing it in so as to mix it with the soil to the depth of five or six inches. Now, as there are 4,840 square yards in an acre, it will be seen that something more than half a pound of guano or bone dust is required for every square yard of surface to be fertilized. This quantity will just nicely cover the surface, about as thick as the sand on a sanded floor; after spreading on the dug surface, it should be mixed with the soil with a spading fork or long-toothed rake to the depth of five or six inches, bearing in mind that the more thoroughly it is mixed with the soil the better will be the result. If used in ‘‘hills” for corn, tomatoes, melons, etc., the same proportionate quantity is to be applied, and the mixing must be equally thorough. 18 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. CHAPTER VI. HOW TO USE CONCENTRATED FERTILIZERS, Whatever kind of concentrated fertilizer may be used, I find it well repays the labor to prepare it in the follow- ing manner: to every bushel of fertilizer, add three bush- els of either leaf-mold (from the woods), well pulverized muck, sweepings from a paved street, or—in the absence of either of the above—common garden soil. In every case the material employed must be as dry as it is possi- ble to procure it. When guano is used, be careful to have it thoroughly pulverized and broken up before mix- ing with the other ingredients. The fertilizer must be well mixed with the soil or mold used by turning it at least twice. This mixing should be done in winter, or early spring, and the material packed away in barrels in a dry place for at least a month before using it. The main object of this operation is for the better separation and division of the fertilizer, so that when applied, it can be more regularly distributed over the land ; besides this, no doubt the fertilizing qualities of the leaf-mold or other substance are developed by this treatment. Ex- periment has shown that this method of using concentra- ted fertilizers of nearly all kinds, materially increases their value. One of the most successful market-garden- ers in our neighborhood, has adopted this method for years, and in extensive experiments with different kinds of fertilizers, with and without being mixed, finds a say- ing of quite one-third in quantity in thus treating them. He finds that 1,200 lbs. of guano, mixed with two tons of garden soil, and sown over the surface after plowing, and then harrowed in, is equal in effect to 2,000 lbs. of guano used without mixing. HOW TO USE CONCENTRATED FERTILIZERS. 19 We have ourselves experimented with guano, blood and bone, and bone flour, with nearly like results, and as a top dressing for grass, we think the advantage of mix- ing is even more marked. When fertilizers are applied to corn, potatoes, tomatoes, etc., in hills or drills, it is not only more economical to mix in this manner, but much safer in inexperienced hands ; for when any strong fertilizer is used pure, injury is often done to the roots by their coming in contact with it in too great quantity in the raw state, owing to imperfect mixing in the hill or drill, while, if composted as advised above, the danger is much less. We are often asked as to the quantity to be applied to different garden crops. Taking guano as a basis, we would recommend for all vegetable crops, if earliness and good quality are desired, the use of not less than 1,200 lbs. per acre, (an acre contains 4,840 square yards, and cultivators for private use can easily estimate from this the quantity they require for any area), mixed with two tons of either of the materials recommended. This quantity is used broadcast by sowing on the ground after plowing, and deeply and thoroughly harrowing in, or if in small gardens, forked in lightly with the prongs of a garden fork or long toothed steel rake. When ap- plied in hills or drills, from 100 to 300 lbs. should be used to the acre, according to the distance of these apart, mixing with soil; etc., as already directed. In regard to which of the fertilizers is most desirable, we find but little difference, provided each is pure. Gu- ano at $80 per ton, is relatively as cheap as blood and bone fertilizer at $65; bone flour at $50, or superphos-- phate at $40 ; for in the lower priced articles we find we are obliged to increase the quantity to obtain the same results, so that the cost is nearly alike whichever be used. The all important point is the purity of the arti- cle, a matter that few working farmers or gardeners ever attempt to decide except by the results in culture, hence 20 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. we advise each one who has been using a fertilizer that has proved satisfactory, to experiment but lightly with another until the new article has proved its merits. The competition in the manufacture of articles so much in use as fertilizers, has in many instances forced down prices below tie point at which they can be produced in a pure state, hence the widespread adulteration with << salt cake,” ‘* plaster,” and other articles utterly worth- less but to make weight. Next in meanness to the quack that extracts money from a poor consumptive for his vile nostrums, is the man who compels the poor farmer or gardener, may be a thousand miles away struggling for an existence, to pay freight on the sand mixed with his guano, or the plaster in his bone dust. In this relation I am reminded of a retribution that fell on the ‘‘ Sands of Life man,” who figured so conspicuously a few years ago in New York. The advertisement of this philan- thropic gentleman, it will be remembered, was that ‘‘ A | retired clergyman whose Sands of Life had nearly run out,” would for a consideration tell how the ‘‘ running out ” could be stopped in others. A kind hearted fellow in Illinois, deeply sympathizing with the old gentleman on account of his loss of ‘‘ sand,” sent him by express— but forgot to prepay—a thousand pounds of the article ! It is reported that the ‘‘ retired clergyman ” on opening the cask, expressed himself in a manner not only ungrate- ful, but utterly unclerical. We counsel no vengeance, but if some of these sand-mixing guano men could haye the sand sifted out by their victims with compound in- ‘terest added, and returned to them under the fostering care of an express company, it would be but even handed justice, SPECIAL FERTILIZERS FOR PARTICULAR PLANTS. 21 CHAPTER VIL SPECIAL FERTILIZERS FOR PARTICULAR PLANTS. A man called at my office a few years ago with some dozen bottles as samples of special manures, indispensa- ble, he said, as fertilizers for certain kinds of plants. He had those with him that he claimed to be specially prepared for cabbage, corn, potatoes, wheat, grass, lawns, beets, etc., etc. He even invaded Flora’s realm, and de- clared that his nostrum for roses was a specific for any languid capers of this sometimes rather coquettish queen of flowers. His own arguments, which were rather plausible and glibly uttered, were backed up by numer- ous certificates—authentic, I have no doubt—where his *‘ potato fertilizer” had worked wonders with some, with others his ‘‘corn manure” had been of undoubted benefit, and so on all through the list. Now, I have no reason to say that the vender of these fertilizers was a quack, except the broad fact, gathered from an experience of thirty years, that has shown me that it makes but little difference with what fertilizer a crop is treated, provided the soil is properly pulverized and the fertilizer applied in proper proportions according to its strength. Had all his separate kinds of fertilizers been taken from the same bag, (provided that bag con- tained a good article of bone-dust or guano), the result to his patrons would have been the same, whether he had used it on one or all of the crops that he had special prescriptions for. There are few market gardeners in the vicinity of New York but who have at one time or another been obliged to take anything they could get for fertilizing purposes, and the difference has never been perceptible when ma- nure from horse stables or cow stables has been applied, 22 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. or when $100 per acre has been expended for bone-dust or Peruvian guano, and these all used ona dozen dif- ferent crops without any discrimination. Agricultural chemistry may be all very well in some respects, but if it gets down to such hair-splitting niceties as to analyze scores of special plants, and tell us that we must feed each with only just such food as the analysis show it to be composed of, then our common sense, born of practical experience, must scout and ridicule such nonsense. Plants, like animals, are not so much kept in good health by the special kind of food given as by the proper quantity and conditions surrounding the individual when the food is received, and what proper temperature and pulverization of soil may be to the plant, air and exercise and also proper temperature are the corresponding con- ditions necessary for healthy animal life. Who will say that the beef-fed English laborer is in any way the phys- ical superior of the Irishman or Scotchman whose daily food has been only potatoes and oat-meal? You get usually fine and nearly equal development in each case, but it is a condition due to a natural use of the muscles in the open air in a congenial climate rather than to anything special in the food. It would be quite as rea- sonable to tell us that a special food, chemically consid- ered, is necessary for each class of our domestic animals as for our domestic plants, and none but the veriest charlatan or ignoramus will do either. : CHAPTER VIII. THE LAWN. Since the introduction of the lawn-mowers, the keep- ing of the lawn has been so simplified that no suburban residence is complete without one, and there is now no THE LAWN. 23 more excuse for tall grass ‘‘ going to hay” in the door yard than there would be for cobwebs taking possession of .the rooms inside the dwelling. We occasionally see some parsimonious individual, even now, who remembers that in his grandfather’s days, grass was allowed to grow for the food of the ‘‘critters,” and he leaves it for food for his ‘‘ critters” still. Though at the same time his furniture inside, that nobody but himself ever sees, or has an op- portunity to admire, for such men are not troubled with friends, may have cost him $5,000 or $10,000. We have two or three notable examples of this kind in my imme- diate neighborhood, but it is gratifying to know that such neighbors are not numerous, for the example of the majority will soon shame them into decency. To have a lawn in first rate condition, the ground must be put in order in the way described under the heads of ** Draining” and ‘‘ Preparation of the Soil,” for if these are necessary anywhere, they are still more necessary for the lawn, the soil of which should be as thoroughly pul- verized and enriched by manure, as any ground intended for the cultivation of either vegetables or fruits. Great care must be taken to have the surface of the ground for the lawn, (unless a very large one), made perfectly level, for if this is not done before the lawn is sown, it cannot be altered but at great expense and inconvenience. After the surface is made level roughly, it should be further smoothed with the rake, and all stones of any considerable size remvved, so that the surface will be smooth for the action of the lawn- mower. Wherever the extent of the lawn does not ex- ceed 2,500 square feet, and where sods can be obtained from a suitable pasture near at hand without much cost, the best way to make the lawn is to sod it, but before doing so, the ground should be rolled or beaten down, particularly if any portion of it has been filled in, so that there may be no ‘settling ” to form hollows or inequali- 24 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. ties. A convenient size of sod to lay down is 12 by 18 inches, and of a thickness of 2 inches, in laying see that — the edges are neatly laid together; and the whole firmly beaten down with the back of a spade. If it is dry weather when the work is done, it may be necessary to thoroughly drench the newly-laid sod for a week or so after planting, every other evening. When the lawn is - too extensive to be sodded, the following mixture of grass seed may be used, which we have found to make an ex- cellent lawn: 8 quarts Rhode Island Bent Grass. 3 quarts Creeping Bent Grass. 10 quarts Red Top Grass. 10 quarts Kentucky Blue Grass. 1 quart White Clover. This mixture is not indispensable to the formation of a good lawn, though we believe it to be the best. Some of the fine lawns seen at Newport, R. I., are composed al- most entirely of Rhode Island Bent grass mixed with about one-sixth of white clover, but the humidity of the atmosphere there has no doubt more to do with the rich- ness of the lawn than the variety of grass it is composed of. I may here caution the use of spurious seed for this purpose. Itis no uncommon thing that either through . ignorance or short-sighted economy, ‘‘ hay-seed ” is taken direct from the hay-loft and sown to form the lawn. ' If from good hay, the seed will be principally timothy and red clover, and vain would be all the attempts to get a smooth lawn from such a source. It would be about as reasonable to expect figs from thistles. If the soil is rich, and has been thoroughly prepared, three bushels per acre will be sufficient, but if thin and poor, from four to five bushels had better be sown. If sown in early spring, as soon as the soil is dry enough to work, a good lawn will be formed by midsummer the first year, if it has been DESIGN FOR GARDEN. 25 mown regularly at intervals of eight or ten days. The seed must be sown as evenly as possible, and for this rea- son a calm day must be chosen, as a very slight wind will throw the seed into heaps. After sowing, the ground may be lightly harrowed if the surface is large, but if not, give it an even raking, but in either case the ground should be smoothed down with a roller or patted with a spade, so to form a smooth surface to be mowed. Al- though if a choice can be had, it is best to sow the lawn seed in early spring, yet it can be sown nearly as profita- bly in September, or in the more southerly states in Oc- tober, or for that matter, even as late as May and June in spring, only if so late, it is better to mix one quart of oats to every bushel of grass-seed, that the oats may shade and protect the young grass from the sun until it has root enough to support itself. But if sown in March or April, or in September or October, there is no need of using the oats, as no injury will be done by the sun at these seasons. ‘To keep the lawn in proper condition, it should be mowed over once every week if the weather is moist, and not less than once in two weeks, even in dry weather, for if the lawn has been properly made in the first place, and ‘‘ top dressed” with a good coat of well- rotted manure in fall, and the rough raked off in spring, the weather must be dry and hot indeed to prevent its growth. CHAPTER IX. DESIGN FOR GARDEN. As this book is intended to comprehend all the wants of a cottage or suburban garden, including flowers, fruits, and vegetables, it would increase its size too much to 2 AA k Wi ZD “ae Ars aporou ANDEAN CAEN, Go wae Fig. 10.—DESIGN FOR SCROLL-PATTERN. inches above the level of the lawn. A great variety of succulent plants are used, such as Kcheverias, Sedums, Mesembryanthemums, etc., together with numerous low- growing Alpine plants, such as Ajugas, Cerastiums, Lys- imachias, Lobelias, Ivies, Alternantheras, etc., ete. This style of bedding requires an immense number of plants. One bed in the carpet style at Battersea Park, containing less than 1,000 square feet, required 4,000 plants to produce the desired effect in the design, and not a leaf of these was more than six inches above the lawn. Planting in this style admits of unlimited va- THE CARPET STYLE OF FLOWER-BEDS. 35 riety in the form of the beds, and contrasts of colors; so great is the care exercised abroad in arranging the de- signs that colored papers, giving the exact tints of the leading flowers and colored foliage, are supplied by the dealers, in order that colored designs may be made and Fig. 11.—ORNAMENTAL DESIGN, AFTER THOMPSON. studied before putting them into execution; a single misplaced color may spoil the effect of the whole. In works of this kind the parts of the design should be sep- arated by well defined portions of turf, as the color of each member of it is brought out more clearly and dis- tinctly, and the whole has a much better effect if a lib- eral amount of green is introduced. The two plans, figs. 10 and 11, are introduced to give an idea of some of the 36 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. simpler designs; the scroll-work, fig. 10, in various forms is much used, either near a drive, or as @ margin or frame to more elaborate work. CHAPTER XI. FALL, OR HOLLAND BULBS. These bulbs are mainly such as are imported from Hol- land in the fall, and consist of Hyacinths, Tulips, Cro- cuses, Jonquils, Narcissuses, Snow-drops, and various other less known kinds. With few exceptions, all these bulbs are hardy in our most northern states, though all are benefitted by a covering of two or three inches of rough litter or leaves spread over the beds before freezing weather. The soil best suited for all bulbs is a rich, but rather sandy loam. All these bulbs may be planted any time from the middle of September, until the ground is closed by frost in December. Hyacinths should be planted at distances of eight or ten inches apart each way, and from three to four inches deep. ‘Tulips, the same distance apart, but a little less deep. Crocuses four inches apart and two inches deep. Jonquils and Narcis- suses may be planted six inches apart and four inches deep. Snow-drops the same as Crocuses. Very fine effects are produced by planting Hyacinths in lines each of one color, or when mixed colors are placed in the lines, care must be taken to have them arranged so that the bed will give harmonious blending of color. Crosuses have nearly the same range of color as the Hyacinth, and may be planted either way. All these bulbs are easily grown in pots. The Hya- cinth requires a pot six inches in depth and diameter ; in FALL, OR HOLLAND BULBS. ov potting it is only necessary to fill the pot rather loosely to the brim, anc press the bulb down, so that only about one-fourth of it appears above the soil. ‘The pot should then be struck smartly on the bench to give the soil the proper degree of firmness, leaving it, when fin- ished, about an inch or so below the rim of the pot. Then water freely to still further settle the soil ‘The pots should then be placed where it is cool and dark, which will encourage a strong development of roots, before the bud starts to grow at the top. Such a situa- tion can be made by covering up the pots with four or five inches of sand in a cool cellar, under the stage of a cool greenhouse, or in a sunken pit, in each case covering with sand or leaves, so as to exclude heat and frost, for it must not be forgotten that a strong development of root can only be had at a low temperature, say from forty to fifty degrees, and any attempt to force them to make roots quicker by placing them in a high temperature, will most certainly enfeeble the flower. If we will only observe how nature points out to us this necessity, we will see how safe it will be to follow her. In all hardy plants, the roots in spring, (when the temperature is low), form the rootlets before a leaf or flower is devel- oped. ‘To show the bad effects when this is not the case, take a root of any of our hardy lilies and plant it in March, and take a similar bulb and plant it in May; it will be found that the early planted bulb that had an opportunity to slowly develop its roots before there was heat cnough to start the top, will give a finer growth and finer flower than the bulb that was planted in May, and run up into growth before it had an opportunity to sufficiently push its roots into the soil. The culture of all the bulbs before named, in pots, is the same as that of the Hyacinth, only the Narcissuses and Tulips should be planted three or four in a six or seyen-inch pot, and Cro- cuses ten or twelve ina pot. All these bulbs may like- 38 | GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. wise be grown in moss, or even pure sand, provided that it is kept damp; the necessity being a medium wherein the roots can revel in moisture. But whether potted in soil, sand, or moss, there will be no need to water, but at the time of potting, provided the pots have been coy- ered up as directed, and kept cool and dark. If potted say the first week in October, they may be removed from their dark quarters in seven or eight weeks, only before doing so, turn a few of them out of the pots to see whether they have rooted around the ball of earth. They may then be placed in full light and watered freely. HYACINTHS IN GLASSES. Although the Jonquils and Narcissuses can be grown in water in glasses as well as the Hyacinth, they are not often so treated, hyacinths being the only bulbs largely flowered in that way, some of which are shown in fig, 12. ¢ AA . Diss Belgian. Vase-shaped. Bohemian. Fig. 12.—aYACINTH GLASSES. The glasses are made of various styles, from the plain old-fashioned Belgian to the ornamental Bohemian glasses, and of clear glass or colored, green, amber, claret, and other shades. The glasses, which are best of a dark color, are filled with water just high enough for the base of the bulb to touch it. The glasses must be placed in a cool and dark place, just such a situation PROPAGATION OF PLANTS BY SEEDS. 39 as recommended for those grown in pots. Care must be taken that they do not freeze, else the glasses will be -broken, and the Hyacinths more or less injured. Single Hyacinths are better than double ones for glasses. The water should be changed every six or eight days. CHAPTER XII. PROPAGATION OF PLANTS BY SEEDS. Nature provides abundantly for the reproduction of plants, and the difficulty of multiplying by one method is compensated by the ease with which it may be done in another. Whenever we find a plant takes root with difficulty from “‘ slips” or cuttings, in nine cases out of ten we find that it seeds freely, and gives us a ready means of increase. Thus we find the much admired Centaureas, one kind of the ‘‘ Dusty Millers,” the white leaved plants now so much used in massing and for baskets, are exceedingly difficult and slow to root from cuttings, but are readily raised from seeds. Our fine strains of blotched Petunias are also troublesome as cut- tings, but make plants quickly from seeds. The Cycla- men with its turnip-like stem or bulb, could only be propagated by cutting in pieces, disfiguring its shape, and requiring years to form acircular bulb again, but here we have seed coming to our help which germinates freely, and makes a flowering plant in one year. The Apple Geranium never affords proper cuttings from which to make a plant, but it seeds freely, from which splendid plants can be produced in a few months. So the Pri- mulas and Cinerarias, both slow and uncertain from cut- tings, seed freely. Hcheveria metallica, one of the beau- ba 40 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. tiful plants of the House-Leek family, produces no bud from the base of the leaf, as nearly all the other species do, but to make up, it seeds abundantly, and so with hundreds of other plants to which our space will not per- mit us to refer. There is no rule by which we can des- ignate what plants are best propagated by seeds, and what by cuttings, experience being the only teacher, and even the experience of a lifetime is too short for those of us that have had the largest practice. Seedling plants can be nearly as well raised in the win- dow of a sitting-room or parlor, provided the tempera- ture is right, as in a greenhouse, for seeds do not need a strong direct light while germinating, in fact that is often a difficulty in a greenhouse, as the surface of the seed-bed dries up too quickly in the direct sunshine, ne- cessitating watering, which bakes the surface. The best thing wherein to sow seeds is shallow boxes; these need not be more than two or three inches deep, with open seams at the bottom through which water will drain quickly. Fill the boxes within half an inch of the top with light rich earth ; if it can be procured, nothing is better than black leaf-mold from the woods, or light sandy soil mixed with an equal bulk of stable manure, so rotted as to resemble leaf-mold, it will not answer un- less rotted as fine as dust. In the absence of either of these, sweepings from a payed street are excellent, mixed with light sandy soil, the object in all cases being light- mess of the soil or mold in which the seed is to be sown ; for if tiny seeds, as many of our flower-seeds are, are embedded in a stiff soil, the germ in many of them is too weak to push its way to the light. When the proper soil has been secured, pat it down with a smooth board until it is as smooth and level as it well can be, then sow the seed carefully over the surface, distributing it evenly, then take a common kitchen sieve and sift just so much earth evenly over the seed as will cover it and no more; PROPAGATION OF PLANTS BY SEEDS. 41 then take a watering-pot with the finest kind of a rose, and shower the earth with the spray. Keep the box at a temperature as near sixty degrees as possible, taking care to give it a shower of spray only when the surface appears to be dry ; but few seeds will fail to germinate ‘under such conditions. But after the seeds have ‘*pbrairded,” as the Scotch gardeners say, comes another difficulty ; in quite a number of plants, particularly if sown in the house, just as soon as the seed leaf has de- veloped, and before the first rough or true leaves have formed, the seedling is attacked by a minute fungus, that will often sweep off the whole crop in 48 hours, if not attended to. The required attention is, that as soon as there are indications of the “‘ damping off” of these tiny seedlings, they must be carefully taken up and planted out in similar boxes, prepared exactly as the seed-boxes have been ; they may be planted quite closely, not more than half an inch apart, and let their further treatment be exactly the same as in germinating the seeds. In the course of a few weeks they will have grown freely, and they may then be lifted and placed in similar boxes, but wider apart, say three or four inches, or potted singly in two and a half or three-inch pots as most convenient, until such a time as they are to be planted out in the open ground, or to be used otherwise. In this way as great a number of plants may be raised from a 25c. or 50c. packet of seed as would cost $25 or $50 to purchase, be- sides the far greater satisfaction of their being the pro- ducts of your own hands. 42 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. CHAPTER XIII. PROPAGATION OF PLANTS BY CUTTINGS. There is no more interesting operation to the amateur gardener than that of increasing his stock of plants by cuttings or slips. Heretofore, it was accounted a great mystery, and unless with some of the commonest kinds of Geraniums, few amateurs ever presumed to invade the territory of the professional gardeners. Nearly all writers on the subject had so befogged this simple matter with technical nonsense, that few, not regularly brought up to the business, presumed to attempt it. We now consider it one of our simplest operations, far simpler than raising many kinds of plants from seed, and though we raise now over two millions of plants annually, and keep a man with three assistants doing nothing else the entire year but propagating plants from slips, yet we could take any careful, intelligent man from among our garden laborers, and install him as a competent propagator in a month. Where plants’ are propagated from cuttings In large numbers, we elevate a bench, usually four feet wide, above the flue or hot-water pipes, to within a foot or so of the glass at the front, and on this table or bench we place three or four inches of sand, of any color or tex- ture, provided it is not from the sea-shore, and contains salt. This benchis boarded downin front, so as to confine the heat from the flue or pipes under it, and give what is called ‘‘ bottom heat’ ; the sand on a bench so formed will indicate a temperature of perhaps seventy degrees, while the atmosphere of the greenhouse, particularly dur- ing the night, will be ten degrees less. Now, if the cut- tings are in the right condition, and are inserted an inch or so in this sand, freely watered, and shaded from the sun from 9 or 10 A.M. to3 or 4 P.M., cuttings of nearly PROPAGATION OF PLANTS BY CUTTINGS. 43 all kinds of plants are certain to take root in from ten to twenty days. But the cuttings must be in the right condition, and this is best shown by the engraving, (fig. 13). It will be observed that the upper portion of the shoot is snapped or broken, while the other is only kneed or bent; this snapping point, as we now term it, is a true indication of proper condition of the cutting ; where it bends and does not break, it is too hard, and though a Fig. 13. —PROPER AND IMPROPER STATE OF CUTTING. cutting will root, when in that condition, it will be slower in doing so, and the roots thrown out from it will be weaker and more wiry than when emitted from a cutting taken in the condition in which it breaks. Be- sides the plant grown from the older cutting will not 44 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. likely be so healthy or vigorous as one made when the shoot is in the proper state. In propagating woody plants, such as Roses, Azaleas, or Camellias, this test of breaking or snapping of the cutting does not in these indicate the proper condition, although they also will root if taken in the soft state, yet we find it is not quite so well to do so as to wait until the cuttings of these woody plants gets harder; what this proper hardness is, it is not very easy always to de- termine. In roses the best condition for taking the cutting is reached when the young shoot, (of which the cutting is made), develops the flower bud to about the size of a large pea. Although the shoot on which the flower bud shows, will make a proper enough cutting, yet if it is not desired to waste the flower, cuttings had better be made of the ‘‘blind” shoots, 7. e., such young shoots as do not flower. In making the cuttings of roses, or in fact of almost all plants, (with a few excep- tions hardly worth noting), there is no need to cut ata joint, although nine gardeners out of ten still do so, par- ticularly those who have learned the business in Europe, where, in this as in many other things in horticulture, they still follow the dictum of some savant of a century ago, never questioning why. But our business necessities here, have caused us to ride rough-shod over many of their set rules, and in none more ruthlessly than in this matter of propagating. But as this book is written mainly for amateurs in gardening, I will proceed to give a simple method by which any one can propagate plants from cuttings or slips, even when no greenhouse or hot- bed is at hand. It is called THE “MUD” OR ‘SAUCER SYSTEM” OF PROPAGATING. Take any common saucer or plate, into which put sand to the depth of an inch or so, then prepare the cut- tings in the usual manner, and insert them in the sand “MUD” OR ‘“ SAUCER “SYSTEM.” 45 close enough to touch each other as infig. 14. The sand is then to be watered to bring it to the condition of mud. The saucer with the cuttings is then placed on the shelf of the greenhouse, in the hot-bed; or in a sunny window of any room in the dwelling house ; in each case fully exposed to the sun and never shaded. But one condi- tion is essential to success—until the cuttings become rooted, the sand must be kept continually saturated with water and always in the condition of mud. ‘To do this the saucers must be watered at least once a day with a very fine rose watering pot, and the watering must be done very gently, else the cuttings may be washed out. There 1s every probability that ninety per cent of all cuttings put in will take root, pro- vided they were in the proper condition, and the temperature has not been lower than 65 degrees nor above 100 degrees. By the saucer system a higher temperature may be main- tained without injury, as the cuttings are in reality placed in water, and will not wilt provided the water is not allowed to dry up. Still the detached slip, until rooted, will not endure a long continuation of 100 degrees, and we advise that propagation be done at such seasons that the cuttings, wherever they may be, will have as near as possible an average temperature of 75° or 80° in the sunlight. The cuttings will root (according to kinds and the tempera- ture), in from six to twenty days. Verbenas, Heliotropes, Fuchsias, etc., root in a week, while Roses, Carnations, or Azaleas, take two, three, or four weeks. When rooted they should be potted in light soil, (such as recommended in the article ‘‘ Propagating of Plants by Seeds,’’) in pots from two to three inches in diameter, and treated care- fully by shading and watering for two or three days. To Fig. ey ae. PROPAGATION. 46 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. such as desire more extended information on the subject of propagating plants by cuttings, 1 would refer to my work, ‘‘ Practical Floriculture.” CHAPTER XIV. PROPAGATING BY LAYERING. Although florists now rarely resort to propagation by layering, yet now and then it may be desirable for ama- teurs to increase the number of some favorite plant dur-_ ing the summer season, where no other method of propa- gation can be practised. The only difference between a layer and a cutting is, that the cutting is entirely de- tached from the parent plant, while the layer remains partially connected with it. Although layering may be done with the ripened wood of vines or shrubs of the growth of the previous season, yet it is prefer- able to use the shoot of I ih the present year in its half green state ; for ex- ample, a rose or flower- ing shrub is pruned in | the usual way in spring; = He. -«sby «midsummer it will \\ JI have made strong shoots SNA QC: CX one, two, or three feet in . \\\ CDRDRA A * length from or near the Fig. 15.—propacatine sy taverine. base of the plant. Take the shoot then in the left hand, (after having stripped it of its leaves for a few inches on each side of where it is to be cut), keep the fingers under the shoot, and make acut on the upper part, f\ Yi ABOUT GRAFTING AND BUDDING. 4% an inch or so in length, and to about half the thickness of the shoot, then slightly twist the ‘‘ tongue” or cut part to one side, as shown in the engraving, fig. 15; hav- ing opened a shallow trench, fasten the branch down with a hooked peg, and cover with earth ; it isa good plan to place a flat stone over the layer to prevent the soil from drying out. This plan of cutting the shoot in layering is rarely shown in illustrations on the subject, the cuts usually being represented at the under side of the shoot. When cut at the lower side, the shoot can not be laid down without danger of breaking it. CHAPTER XV. ABOUT GRAFTING AND BUDDING. It is often desirable to be able to bud or graft one variety of plant on another entirely different variety ; and it is an interesting fact to know that the bud taken from one plant and inserted so that it grows in another, and is entirely sustained by the plant into which it has been budded, in no way changes its character. This fact is so well known to gardeners that they rarely think it necessary to mention it in writing on the subject, and many amateurs interested in horticultural matters have very confused notions on budding. ‘To illustrate: if a leaf bud is taken from a white Rose, and inserted in the stem of a red Rose, all the branches that proceed from this bud, leaves or flowers, will be identical with the white Rose from which it was taken. Or if a leaf bud of the red Rose be inserted in the white, the same result would follow; it will be identical in all respects with the red variety. Or you may take a bud or graft from the 48 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. sourest crab apple, and insert it into a branch of the sweetest apple tree you can find, and the shoot which grows from the crab apple bud will ever remain a crab, and will in no way be affected by the sweet apple stock on which it is growing. Or if the operation is reversed, and the sweet apple is budded or grafted on the sour, | the result will be the same ; its individuality will be in no way changed, it will be identical with the variety from which it was taken. Still further to illustrate this matter of budding or grafting, you may take a rose-bush having any number of shoots, it makes no difference whether one or a hun- dred ; on each shoot you may bud a distinct variety of Rose, of all the colors, forms or odors embraced in the Roses, and each one will hold its distinct characteristic of color, form, or fragrance, be it crimson, white, pink, or yellow in color, double or single in form, or of tea or other odor. Or you may take a young seedling apple tree, insert a bud of another into it, then after that bud has made a growth, bud still another variety into that, and so on as many as is desired, rub of all shoots in the stem that start below, and the variety last budded will hold its individuality unchanged, no matter though the life-sustaining sap flows through the cells of several dif- ferent kinds. You may mark the space occupied by each of the varieties, and cut back to any particular variety, and the fruit that will be produced by that part, which will then be the top, will hold its character without change. What is true of roses and apples, is of course equally true of whatever plant that can be grafted or budded. The stock does not in any manner affect the individu- ality of the graft, and I supposed that this was one of the generally accepted axioms of horticulture, but in a conversation not long ago with a gentleman whose opin- ion is entitled to consideration, I found him inclined to believe that there were some few exceptions to what was ABOUT GRAFTING AND BUDDING. 49 admitted to be a general law, and in support of his argu- _ ment, he referred me for exceptions to Darwin’s ‘ Plants and Animals under Domestication.” I have examined this work, and find only two cases wherein it is claimed that the graft is influenced by the stock, or the stock by the graft. The first isat page 457, Vol. 1, where “ Prof. Caspary describes the case of a six-year-old white Moss Rose, which sent up several suckers, one of which was thorny and destitute of moss, exactly like those of the Provence Rose, (2. centifolia), another shoot bore both kinds of flowers, and in addition longitudinally striped flowers. As this white moss had been grafted on the Provence Rose, Prof. Caspary attributes the above changes to the influence of the stock, but from the facts already given, and from others to be given, bud variation with reversion is probably sufficient explanation” ; and Dar- win proceeds to give nearly a dozen cases of like variation where there was no grafting at all. A very marked case of this ‘‘bud variation” is at the present time existing in my own greenhouses. In a bed of about one hun- dred plants of the new tea-rose, ‘‘ La Nankin,” all made from the cuttings from one parent plant, we have had four distinct varieties. The original flower or bud has its base or lower half of a nankeen yellow color, while its upper half is pure white, the separate colors being clearly defined, yet among our plants from cuttings we have some flowers that are entirely of the nankeen color, with- out white ; then again pure white with no nankeen, and on one shoot the flowers came of a light pink or blush shade. Now had Prof. Caspary a grafted plant of ‘* La Nankin” playing these freaks, he no doubt would have concluded that it was the influence of the graft on the stock. There are other instances in grafting where an amalgamation of individualities apparently occurs ; these cases are familiar to all horticulturists of much experi- ence, and are also alluded to by Darwin in the work above 3 50 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. referred to. He gives a number of instances where the vari- egated Oleander grafted on the plain leaved variety as a stock, imparts the variegation to the stock, or where a yel- low-leaved ash tree, grafted on the common green-leaved variety, produced a blotched or variegated variety. That most of the variegation in the foliage of plants, is due to disease, or at least some disturbance of the regular func- tions of the leaf, there is but little doubt, and it is there- fore but an accidental condition of the individual. Where a variegated plant is budded or grafted upon a healthy subject, the disease is transmitted from .the unhealthy bud or graft to the healthy stock in a manner somewhat analogous to innoculation of smallpox virus in man. The character or constitution of the individual is in no way affected in the one case more than in the other. Marked instances in which plain-leaved plants become variegated by being grafted with variegated cions, are afforded by the variegated Abutilons ; but in all such cases it is sim- ply the ‘‘blotching” or ‘‘ disease” of the foliage that occurs, there is no change whatever in the coloring of the flowers or shape of the leaves, the individuality of these remains unchanged. ‘That leaf variegation is indicative of disease, is manifest from another fact. It is quite a common thing to find a shoot sent out by the silver- leayed or variegated Geraniums that is pure white in stem and leaves, not a particle of green, or such golden varie- gated kinds cf Geraniums as ‘‘ Mrs. Pollock” will send out a pure yellow shoot ; but all efforts to make plants of such shoots will fail; they may feebly root as cuttings, or they may be grafted on a green-leaved, healthy stock long enough to drag out afew weeks of existence, but the disease is here thoroughly established, and all attempts to propagate these entirely abnormal growths completely fail. It has been claimed that the Duchesse d’Angouleme and other pears are much better flavored when grafted on the quince than on the pear stock, and these are quoted 4 HOW GRAFTING AND BUDDING ARE DONE. 51 as examples of the influence of the stock on the graft, but to me this seems capable of another explanation : We know that the pear stock is a vigorous and rampant grower as compared with the quince, and may it not be that this vigor of growth in the tree impairs the flavor of the fruit in some varieties, just as we find the flavor of fruits impaired when grown in too rich soil ? The effect of soil upon quality is particularly marked in melons. Iremember that I once grew a field of three acres of nutmeg melons, one-half of the patch was rich bottom land, and the other portion was a rather poor hillside. The fruit produced on the bottom was much larger, but so different from and inferior in flavor to those on the hillside that no one would have recognized the two as being of the same variety. The same, though in a less marked degree, probably occurs in other fruits under similar conditions. From these reasons I believe it safe to assert that no evidence has yet been shown wherein the stock in any manner affects the graft other than that it may cause it to grow stronger or weaker, just as the stock is strong or weak, and the amount of such influence will be only such as a rich or poor soil would produce. In other words, the ‘‘ stock” is only a medium or soil wherein the grafted individual grows, and affects it no more than if it drew its sustenance direct from the earth—strong, if on a strong stock, as on a fer- tile soil, and weak, if on a weak stock, as on a sterile soil. CHAPTER? EVE HOW GRAFTING AND BUDDING ARE DONE. After this discussion of general principles, let us come to the practice of grafting and budding. In what has been said, they have been used as synonyms, and their 52 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. object 1s precisely the same—to propagate a particular plant upon a rooted plant of another kind. Among fruits we do this because we cannot multiply choice vari- eties by seed or by cuttings ; stocks are raised from seed, which if allowed to grow and bear, might produce a poor and worthless fruit, os it may be a good kind. To make matters sure, we graft a twig of a kind that we know upon a seedling about which we know nothing. With Camellias, the choice kinds cannot well be propagated from cuttings, but some of the commoner kinds will grow in this way, and the choice Camellias are grafted upon stocks obtained by rooting cuttings of the others ; so in various cases among fruits and flowers, budding or grafting af- fords the readiest, if not the only method, by which we can multiply certain varieties. A graft is a twig contain- ing one or more buds, and so inserted or planted in the stock that the new bark and new wood of the two shall be in close contact; in budding, a single bud with no wood, or as little wood as possible, is inserted or planted below the bark of the stock and in direct contact with its new or sap-wood. While we give the two operations dif- ferent names, the French call budding simply a variety of erafting—shield-grafting. In a general way it may be stated that in grafting we use buds of a previous year, and in- sert them upon the stock where they are to grow the spring after they are formed, and as soon as vegetation starts, these buds commence to grow. In budding we use buds of the current season’s growth; the recently formed buds, near the end of the growing season, are planted in the stock where they unite, and remain dor- mant until spring, when the inserted bud pushes into growth at the time that the natural buds of the stock start. ‘These statements apply only to out-door grafting and budding ; when these operations are performed under glass, the propagator has control of atmospheric condi- tions, and yaries them to suit the subjects in hand. In GRAFTING. 53 out-door grafting, such as that upon fruit-trees, the cions are best if cut in the fall and preserved in sand or saw- dust in the cellar during the winter; though with very hardy sorts this is not essential, they should be cut before any swelling of the buds takes place. The operation suc- ceeds best when the buds on the cion are perfectly dor- mant, and those on the stock have swollen and about to open. GRAFTING. The various methods of grafting are too many to describe here ; the simplest is the cleft graft ; the stock is sawed off and the end cleft or split for a few inches down through the center, (fig. 16); the cion, (or two if the stock is over an inch in diameter), with two or three buds, has its lower end smoothly cut to form a wedge a trifle thicker on one side than the other, (fig. 17) ; the cleft in the stock is pried open by means of an iron wedge ora wedge- shaped stick, and the cion or clons set with the thicker edge of the wedge outward, observing to bring the in- ner bark and new wood of stock and cion in as close contact as possible; the opening wedge being withdrawn, the spring of the stock will hold the cions in place, (fig. 18); the junction is to be covered with grafting wax, or waxed cloth, taking care to completely cover every wounded portion of both stock and cion. It is by this method that most of the grafting is done all over the country ; it is rude but very successful ; the ob- \ an f yy ' \ PENS mS NING iis oN Cie Rect Fig.16. Fig.1% Fig. 18, CLEFT GRAFTING. 54 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. @ jection to it is that it leaves too great a wound to be closed over. For small stocks the whip-graft is generally used ; it is much easier to do it than to describe it ; stock and cion should be as near of a size as possible ; both are cut with a similar slope, and in each slope is cut a tongue as in fig. 19; when the two slopes are put together, the Fig. 19.— WHIP GRAFT. two tongues are interlocked as in the engraving, taking care that the inner bark of stock and cion come in con- tact as completely as possible. In this illustration the parts are represented as tied with twine, to show the joint below, but in practice the whole is completely covy- ered with a band of waxed cloth. This, where practica- ble, is an excellent graft, there being no large wounds to heal over, and the points of union are numerous. This graft is much used by nurserymen in root-grafting small apple and pear stocks. A very simple form called the side- graft is often employed by florists and nurserymen ; the GRAFTING. 5d cion is cut to a long wedge, and the stock has a down- ward cut made in its stem into which the cion is inserted as in fig. 20. In grafting the Camellia and other hard- wooded plants, a combination of the whip and side graft is made use of as shown in fig. 21. Grafting wax used to cover the wounds made in graft- ing may be purchased at the seed and implement stores, or the amateur can make it himself. It should be soft iff ay Fig. 21.—GRAFTING THE CAMELLIA. enough to be molded by the heat of the hand on a cool day, but not so soft as to run when exposed to the heat of the sun. It is essentially rosin and beeswax, with tal- low or linseed oi! enough to make it sufficiently soft. A good formula is rosin 2 lbs., beeswax 1*|, Ib., tallow ‘|, Ib. ‘The better way for the amateur to use this is to melt the whole together thoroughly and then dip in it strips of well worn cloth, such as may be torn from a worn-out sheet or calico dress. These waxed strips will tear read- ily, and may be neatly fitted to the graft to make a com- 56 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. plete covering; the fingers should be slightly greased when applying the waxed cloth. BUDDING The shoot or stock to be budded upon must be ina thrifty growing state, so that the bark can be raised freely from the wood, and the bud to be inserted must be in such a state that it shows prominently at the axil of the leaf. Select a smooth portion of the stem of the stock, strip it of leaves, sufficiently to allow room for the operation, then make a cut through the bark to the wood of an inch or so, with a cross cut at the top, as shown in fig. 23; it will be observed that the illustra- tion shows that a slight cut of the bark is made above the cross cut, this is done to allow the bud _ to slip in bet- ter; this custom we think is not gener- al, but we find the operation is done quicker and better by its use. Then take the shoot from which the bud is to be cut, and selecting a properly developed bud, cut it from the shoot as shown in fig, 22 ; if the portion of the shoot from which the bud - is taken is well ripened, it is best to separate the wood from the bark of the bud; but if not it had better re- main on. Usually it is necessary to take the wood from buds on the lower part of the shoot, while the upper part being less ripened, those buds may be inserted with the wood remaining. The edges of the cut in the Fig. 23. Fig. 24. Fig. 25. CUT. BUD IN. BUD TIED. THE METHOD OF BUDDING. / TREATMENT OF TROPICAL BULBS, SEEDS, ETC. 57 stock are lifted by the point of the knife or an ivory at- tachment to the budding-knife, the bud inserted and pushed down as in fig. 24; the portion of bark attached to the bud that projects above the horizontal cut in the stock is cut off, and the tie applied. This is usually bast matting, though cotton wick or other soft material will do. The engraving, fig. 25, shows where to place the tie, but when of bast it quite covers the wound and ex- cludes water and prevents drying. In two or three weeks after the bud has been inserted, it will be safe to remove the tying, and if the operation has been performed on a Rose in June, it will often make a considerable growth the same season, but it usually lies dormant until the next spring. All shoots upon the stock below the bud must be rubbed off, and when the bud that has been inserted starts to grow, the stem above it must also be cut back just above, so that the inserted bud which now becomes the plant, may get the full benefit of the root, CHAPTER XVII. TREATMENT OF TROPICAL BULBS, SEEDS, ETC. Any information that can be given in an article short enough to be suitable for amateurs on a subject so ex- tended as this must be confined to a few well known and leading plants-‘most valued for general cultivation. First may be placed the Tuberose, which in most northern states must be artificially forwarded to bloom in perfec- tion in the open air. The seasons are too short for the full development of the flowers in fall unless the bulbs are so forwarded. All that it is necessary to do is to place the dry bulbs in soil in pots or in boxes about May 58 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. 1st, (not before), keeping them rather dry until they start to grow freely, when more water may be given. Plant the bulbs thus started in the open border, the first week in June. The bulbs while being forwarded may be kept in any place where the thermometer ranges from about 65° to 75° at night. We usually place them un- der or alongside the hot-water pipes in our greenhouses, covering them up with paper to keep the heat of the pipes from them. Light is not necessary until they have well started to grow. A greenhouse is not essential for starting them in, as a hot-bed, or even a warm sitting room, will do nearly as well. Any one wishing to have their Tuberoses ‘‘ started” can do it themselves just as well as a florist can, and as the dry bulb costs less than half the price of the started one, and is mcre safely transported by mail or otherwise, any one taking the trouble to do it will save expense and have the bulbs in better condition for planting. Some of my readers have seen or cultivated the bulbs known as fancy or spotted-leaved Caladiums. ‘There are probably no plants that assume such varied and wonder- ful markings of the leaves as these, and when properly grown, they are among the most attractive plants at our horticultural fairs. The continued high temperature necessary for the healthy growth of the Tuberose, is equally indispensable for the Caladium. The bulbs we treat at first exactly in the same manner as the Tube- rose; that is, they should not be started much before May ist, and never should they be kept for any length of time in a less temperature than 65°. They are best started in small pots, and should be shifted into larger ones as soon as these get filled with roots. Started in May, and properly treated, they should be large enough by August or September to require a flower-pot twelve inches in diameter, and the plant should be, according to the variety, from two to three feet in diameter across the TREATMENT OF TROPICAL BULBS, SEEDS, ETC. 59 leaves. Caladiums require a partial shade, and if kept in a greenhouse during summer, the glass should be shaded, but the light of an ordinary sitting-room would be just about right; so that even those who have nota greenhouse can grow these rather rare and beautiful plants with perfect ease. ‘The only thing necessary if grown as a window plant, is to turn the pot around every few days so that each side may get a proper amount of light—a necessity with all plants grown in windows. The soil best suited for its growth is that known as sandy loam, to which should be added one-third rotted manure or leaf mold. . The same time of starting and a similarly high tem- perature is required for Begonias of all kinds, Bouvardias, Cissus, Coleuses, Draczenas, Euphorbias, Poinsettias, and all other plants known as ‘‘ hot-house’’ or ‘ tropical,” and the same general treatment will in nearly all cases lead to satisfactory results. All of the plants or bulbs referred to will dwindle or die if long kept in a low tem- perature, and hence it is important that amateurs should remember that they ought not to attempt the cultivation of these plants unless they have the means of steadily keeping up the necessary high temperature. For that reason we recommend that they should not be started before May, as then they run less risk of being chilled. What is true of tropical bulbs or plants is equally so of tropical seeds. Those who have not had experience or who have not the means of keeping up the necessary high temperature, should not sow the seeds of tropical plants before April 1st. Of vegetable seeds, the best known of this class are the Tomato, Pepper, and Egg-plant. I know they are often started in March in hot-beds or greenhouses with satisfactory results, but let any one try the experiment of sowing on March 1st and on April 1st, and note the result in the earliness of the crops, from the two sowings, and he will find that the chances 60 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. are that the last shall be first ; if it were always practi- cable to keep the necessary temperature steadily along, the first sown would be the first, but this is often very difficult to accomplish, while thére is but little dif- ficulty with the later sowing, as assistance is then given by the increasing outside temperature. For this reason seeds of tropical annual flowers, such as Amaranths of all kinds, Balsams, Salvias, Double Portulacas, Cannas, Coxcombs, Zinnias, etc., should not be sown before April in the hot-bed, or if in the open ground, in this latitude, not before May 15th. CHAPTER XVIII. THE POTTING OF PLANTS. This naturally follows the preceding chapter, and I will briefly state a few of the most important points; first of all is soil, or potting mold, often rather a troublesome thing to get by those who have only a few dozen plants to repot. The soil used by us, and most florists, for nearly every plant we grow, is one combining freshness, richness, and what is called friableness of texture; this condition we get by paring off the sod from the roadside, mixing it with one-third of well-rotted stable manure, and throwing it in heaps until it rots; turning it over two or three timés until the whole is well mixed ; if the plants are small, we run it through a fine sieve before using it ; if large, we use it rough, without sifting. But it may not always be convenient to get this material, and it is by no means indispensable to success ; leaf-mold from the woods, mixed with any fresh field loam, and a little rotted stable manure, will answer nearly as well ; THE POTTING OF PLANTS. 61 or city folks can get sweepings from the pavements, and these mixed in equal bulk with any good fresh soil, that from an old cultivated garden is not usually so good, will make a potting soil in which almost any plant will grow vigorously ; of late years we have used street sweep- ings largely in our potting soil, and like it very much. Now having the soil in proper condition, the next thing is the pots, which, if they are not new, should be thoroughly washed, so that the evaporation of moisture will take place freely through the porous sides. One of the most common errors among amateur cultivators is to put their plants in too large pots. If a plant such asa Rose or Geranium is lifted up out of the ground to be potted, it should be placed in a pot only large enough to allow an inch or so of soil to be placed below, and around its roots,—or to make it better understood, if the plants are, say a foot high, and a foot in diameter, they should be pruned back so that the diameter will not be more than 6 or 8 inches, and for such sized plants the pot should not be more than 6 inches wide and deep. The same rule applies to plants that have been grow- ing in pots; if it is now ina pot three inches wide, a proper shift will be to one four or four and a half inches wide; if in a five-inch, shift to six and a half or seven-inch, and soon. In taking a plant out of a pot to place it in another one, turn it upside down with the fingers of the left hand spread over the surface of the earth, or top of the ball; with the right hand holding the pot by the bottom, give the rim a smart rap on the edge of a board, and the ball of earth enveloping the root will come out, just as a jelly will out of a mold. Iam par- ticular in referring to this simple matter, knowing that it is no uncommon thing for ladies to break the pot with a hammer in their endeavors to get at the root, although they would hardly sacrifice a bowl to get at the jelly. In shifting, or repotting, place a little soil in the bottom 62 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. of the pot, then place in the ball of roots exactly in the center, which will leave a space of from half an inch to two or three inches between this and the sides of the pot, according to the size of plant to be shifted; to pack this space between the side of the pot and the ball of roots with soil, itis better to use a flat stick with which to crowd it in moderately firm, filling up the pot to with- in an inch or so of the rim, this space being required to enable it to hold water. After potting, give a good watering with a sprinkler to settle the soil to the bottom of the pot, but after this be sparing of water until the plant shows signs of new growth, which will take place simultaneously with its making roots in the fresh soil. We use no potsherds or drainage of any sort in our pots, believing it to be perfectly useless to do so, the evapora- tion from the porous sides of the pot in our dry climate giving drainage enough. In the greenhouse we always spread an inch or so of sand on the bench or table upon which the plants stand; this to some extent pre- vents the plants from being injured when watering has been too long neglected, as the pots and the soil imbibe moisture from the sand which is usually more or less wet. When the plants are placed on bare shelves, either in the sitting-room where they are well exposed to light, or in the greenhouse, watering should be done at least once a day, provided they are growing vigorously. a ee CHAPTER XIX. WINTER FLOWERING PLANTS. The increase in the taste for winter-flowering plants, within the past five years, has been even more positive than that for the cultivation of plants out of doors, formerly it was rare for florists to fill an order in the fall, WINTER FLOWERING PLANTS. 63 but now, during the months of October, November, and December, they make shipments daily in large quantities to every section of the country ; and these nearly equaling in number those of plants for the open ground in May and June. The plants best suited for flowering in winter may be divided into two classes. First, those requiring a moderate temperature at night, say an average of 50 degrees. Whether the plants are grown in the parlor or sitting-room of a private dwelling, or in a greenhouse especially constructed for their cul- ture, the conditions should be as nearly as possible the same ; that is, uniformity of temperature ranging from 45° to 55°, and an avoidance of a dry atmosphere; it is easy enough in the greenhouse to. get a properly hu- mid atmosphere by sprinkling the paths with water ; but in a room in the dwelling house, the only thing that can be done is to place pans of water on the stove, fur- nace, or whatever may be the source of heat. If plants are kept in a sitting-room or parlor, an east, south-east, or south aspect should be chosen. Plants of the class that may be grown at an average temperature of 50 degrees, are Azaleas, Abutilons, Ageratums, Carnations, Cinerarias, Catalonian Jessamines, Cape Jessamines, Camellias, Callas, Chorizemas, Geraniums of all kinds, Hibiscus, Hyacinths, Myrsiphyllum, (Smilax), Maher- nias, Primulas, Stevias, Roses, Violets, and the various kinds known as greenhouse plants, which, together with those above named, can be found fully described in the florists’ catalogues. The second class, or hot-house plants, require an ayer- age temperature of 60 degrees at night, the range of which, however, may occasionally run from 55° to 65° without injury. Of these we name the following : Be- gonias, Bouvardias, Clerodendrons, Euphorbias, Epiphyl- Iums, Fuchsias, Heliotropes, Poinsettia, Roses, (these will do in either temperature), Tuberoses, etc. For de- 64 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. scriptions of varieties, reference may be made to the cat- alogues. ‘The necessity for this difference in temperature is not absolute, as many plants will do partially well in either ; but we make this distinction as a guide to those having a choice of temperatures, in order that they may select the plants that are best adapted to the one at com- mand. Ina greenhouse, particularly if heated by a flue, there is often a difference of five or ten degrees between one end and the other ; in such a case the plants named in the first class must be placed at the cool end, and those of the second class at the other. One of the most troublesome pests of plants grown in the greenhouse, or sitting-room, in winter, is the aphis, or ‘‘ green fly,” as it is termed; we have no difficulty in getting rid of it in the greenhouse, when it is separate from the house ; all that is necessary is to get some to- bacco stems (such as are thrown out as refuse by cigar makers), and soak them in water for a minute or two; about half a pound or so for a greenhouse 25 x 20 feet is placed over a small handful of shavings, only enough to light the dampened tobacco, as too many might injure the plants by smoke; the burned tobacco stems give out a smoke that is quickly fatal to the ‘green fly.” ‘To. thoroughly prevent the least appearance of this insect, the greenhouse must be fumigated every four or five days. We fumigate all our greenhouses twice each week during the entire year ; our rule being that an aphis must never be seen upon any plant in the houses. If the greenhouse is attached to the dwelling, so that the tobacco smoke would find its way into the rooms, recourse may be had to another remedy ; take these same waste tobacco stems and steep them in water until the liquid is of the color of strong tea, with this water syringe the plants freeiy twice a week, this will not only effectually destroy the green fly, but will keep in check most other insects that infest plants. Where only a few plants are kept in WINTER FLOWERING PLANTS. 65 rooms, the easiest way is to dip the plants entirely in the tobacco water, moving them up and down in the liquid, to wash the insects off if they have a firm hold. ‘The ‘‘red spider” is another pest to winter blooming plants, and wherever it is seen you may be cer- tain that the atmosphere has been too dry, and very likely the temperature too hot, as it is rarely found in a cool, damp atmosphere. The treatment for this insect in the greenhouse is copious syringings with water, but where but a few plants are grown in the house, it is best to go over the leaves, especially on the under side, with a wet sponge. ‘The red spider is so minute that it is hardly distinguishable by the naked eye, but its destruc- tive effects are quickly perceivable, as the leaves upon which it works soon become brown, and if the leaves are closely examined, particularly the underside, the minute insect will be seen in great numbers. Another troublesome insect among plants that are grown in a high temperature is the ‘‘ mealy bug.” The insect is flat, of whitish brown, usually nestling at the axils of the leaves, where it is covered with a white pow- der, making it easily distinguishable ; this is one of the most annoying of all insects that attack plants, as noth- ing seems to kill it, unless the remedy is strong enough to injure the plants ; so-that rubbing it off with a small brush is the only safe remedy that we would care to recommend to amateurs. We find alcohol thrown on by what is called an “atomizer,” sold by druggists for be- deying with perfumes, to be very effective in destroy- ing the ‘“‘mealy bug,” as the aleohol reaches to every part of the plant, but we also find that some plants when in very soft growth are injured by even this light appli- cation of alcohol. Another pest, not an insect, but a vegetable parasitic growth known as mildew, affects but few plants in-doors except the rose, still as it is most in- jurious to those, we give the most effectual remedy for 66 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. destroying mildew on roses either outside or under cover. Boil one lb. of lime and one |b. of sulphur in two gal- lons of water, until it is reduced to one gallon ; allow the liquid to settle until clear, and bottle it for use; one gill only, no more, of this liquid, is mixed in five gallons of water, and this syringed thoroughly over the rose plants in the evening. If in the house, so that syringing cannot be done, dip the plants in it as recommended for the tobacco water. As with most other remedies, we pre- fer to use this lime and sulphur mixture as a preventive rather than as a cure, and we apply it to our roses at least once a week, even though there is no appearance of mildew. In proportion as plants are kept free from in- sects and mildew, so will be their vigor and their thrifti- ness. For more complete information see special chapter ~ on insects and mildew. I may here warn the amateur against the too common practice of placing plants in too large pots. As a gen- eral thing, when plants are received from the florists, they are sent without pots, and are usually in a condition requiring them to be shifted into a pot larger than they had been growing in; for example, if they have been grown in a pot of 3 inches diameter, place them in one a size larger, or 4 inches in diameter ; if they were in 4- inch pots give them one 5 or 6 inches across, and so on. Though we entirely ignore the use of crocks, or drainage in pots in our own practice, where we have always the proper sizes to use in potting, yet in cases where a suita- ble sized pot is not on hand into which to shift, (for ex- ample, if a plant that has been grown in a pot of 3 inches diameter, must be put in one of 6 inches), then by all means fill up one-third of this too large pot with broken pots, charcoal, or some such material to drain off the surplus moisture that would otherwise be injurious, in consequence of the pot being too large for the plant ; but if the pot into which it is shifted is UNHEALTHY PLANTS—THE REMEDY. 67 properly adjusted to the wants of the plant, the putting in of crocks for drainage is worse than useless, I care not what the plant may be. Our greenhouse establishment now covers nearly two acres, yet not a pot is so ‘‘ drained.” The need of a larger pot is shown by the earth becoming so filled with roots that they well cover the outside of the ball, but shifting into a larger pot should be done while the roots are yet white; if left until the roots get thor- oughly matted, brown, and hard, it is too late, and the future growth will be seriously retarded. If the plant has been allowed to reach this condition, which we call ‘‘pot bound,” it is best to lay the ball of roots on one hand and slap it smartly so as to loosen it; _by this treatment the new fibres strike out more read- ily from the hard roots than if left with the ball still compact. After shifting a plant, give it one good water- ing, so that the soil will be thoroughly soaked to the bot- tom of the pot; but after that, keep rather dry until there are indications of new growth. For manner of pot- ting, see chapter on ‘‘ The Potting of Plants.” We are often asked as to the use of guano and other fertilizers on in-door plants. As a general thing we use none in our own practice, preferring to shift the plants into fresh soil at the proper time, rather than to do so, and we would advise the same to our friends of less experience, for the use of all such stimulants is, under certain conditions of the plants, dangerous in unpracticed hands. CHAPTER XX. UNHEALTHY PLANTS—THE REMEDY. Whenever plants begin to drop their leaves, it 1s cer- tain that their health has been injured ; this may be due to over-potting, over-watering, over-heating, too much cold, 68 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. or the application of such stimulants as guano, or to some other cause which has destroyed the fine rootlets by which the plant feeds, and induced disease that may lead to death. The case is not usually important enough to call in a ‘‘ plant doctor,” so the amateur begins to treat the patient, and the practice is in all probability not unlike that of many of our household physicians who apply a remedy that increases the disease. Having already de- stroyed the, so to speak, nutritive organs of the plant, the stomach is gorged with food by applying water, or with medicine, by applying guano or some patent “ plant food.” Now the remedy is nearly akin to what is a good one when the animal digestion is deranged—give it no more food until it re-acts. We must then, if the roots of the plant have been injured from any of the above named causes, let the soil in which it is potted become nearly dry ; then remove the plant from the pot, take the ball of soil in which the roots have been enveloped, and crush it between the hands just enough to allow all the sour outer crust of the ball of earth to be shaken off ; then re-pot in rather dry soil, (composed of any fresh soil mixed with equal bulk of leaf-mold or street sweep- ings), using a new flower-pot, or the old one, thor- oughly washing it, so that the moisture can freely evap- orate through the pores. Be careful not to over-feed the sick plant. Let the pot be only large enough to admit of not more than an inch of soil between the pot and ball of roots. After re-potting, give it water enough to set- tle the soil, and do not apply any more until the plant has begun to grow, unless indeed the atmosphere is so dry that the moisture has entirely evaporated from the soil, then of course water must be given, or the patient may die from the opposite cause—starvation. The dan- ger to be avoided is in all probability that which brought on the sickness, namely : saturation of the soil by too much water. Other causes may induce sickness in PLANTS SUITED FOR SUMMER DECORATION. 69 plants, such as an escape of gas in the apartment, or smoke from a flue in the greenhouse, but in all cases, when the leaves fall from a plant, withhold water, and if there is reason to believe that the soil has been poi- soned by gas, or soddened with moisture, shake it from the roots as before advised, and re-pot in a fresh flower- pot. Many years ago, when I used smoke-flues in my greenhouses, some kindling wood, carelessly thrown on the top of one of them, ignited, and the smoke caused the leaves of every plant to drop. There were some 3,000 plants, mostly T’ea-Roses, in the greenhouse; it would have been too much of a job to re-pot all, but by with- holding water for some ten days, they started a new growth again, and very few plants were injured. CHAPTER XXI. PLANTS SUITED FOR SUMMER DECORATION. Quite a number of winter-blooming plants can also be used for flowering in the open borders in summer. Among these are Carnations, Heliotropes, Fuchsias, Ge- raniums, and particularly the monthly varieties of Roses. Also the following, not strictly winter-flowering, are such as will give a continuous bloom during the whole season, from June until October or November. Antirrhinums, (raised either from seeds or cuttings), Dwarf Dahlias, Erythrina or Coral Plant, Gladiolus, Geraniums of all kinds, particularly the class known as “Zonal,” double and single, Lantanas, Lobelias, (seeds or cuttings), Petu- nias, single, (seeds or cuttings), Petunias, double ; Pan- sles, (seeds only) ; Pentstemons, Passion-flowers, Ronde- letias, Salvias, (seeds or cuttings) ; Tropsolums, (seeds or 10 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. cuttings); Verbenas, (seeds or cuttings); Veronicas. All of ° the above have their principal attraction in their flowers. The following are only useful for the brilliant color- ing or other peculiarities of foliage. Alternantheras, Achyranthes, Artemisias, Cerastium, Centaureas, (seeds or cuttings) ; Caladiums, Coleus, Cinerarias, (seeds -or cuttings); Draceenas, Echeverias, Geraniums, (silver, gold, or bronze); variegated Ivies; Lysimachia, variegated Grasses ; Peristrophe, Sanchezia nobilis, Vinca major, etc., etc. For descriptions see florists’ catalogues. All of the above can be raised from slips or cuttings taken from plants, (or by seeds where noted), during the win- ter or early spring months—January, February, March, or April, either from plants that have been kept for flowering in winter, or from large plants that have been preserved for the purpose of propagation; the young plants raised from slips are in nearly every instance preferable to the old plants. Our practice is, to grow the old, or ‘‘stock” plants, simply to make cuttings, until we get enough from them, and then to throw the old plant away, reserving the young ones only for sell- ing, or for our own planting in ‘the open borders. Cuttings are rooted in the way described in the chapter on ‘* Propagation of Plants by Cuttings,” or if by seeds, as in chapter on ‘‘ Propagation by Seeds.” The young plants should first be potted in 2-inch pots, and if early in the season, they will require to be shifted into 3-inch ~ pots before it is time to plant them out in the open ground, which it is not safe to do in this latitude until the middle of May; nor in any other latitude before the time when tomatoes or egg plants can safely be planted out. Nothing is more satisfactory to the lover of flowers than — raising his own plants, no matter how able he may be to purchase. Those of his own raising, whether for his own — use or to present to his friends, are always more val-— uable than anything that money can buy. One of the PLANTS SUITED FOR SUMMER DECORATION. oe most common mistakes made by purchasers of plants in our city markets, is that of almost invariably choosing large plants, forced into flower; such plants are usually grown under a high temperature to get them in bloom early, and many a housewife has found that the beautiful full blooming plant of a Rose, Fuchsia, or Pelargonium, which she so tenderly carried home, will in 48 hours drop its flowers and leaves in the cooler and drier atmosphere ot her greenhouse, parlor, or garden.. But the florist is hardly to blame for this, though I know he is often se- verely censured ; not one in a score of those who pur- chase plants in spring will buy any plant unless it is in bloom ; the florist grows plants to sell, and must suit the wants of his customer. This partial divergence from the subject in hand, is to show that the small slips or cut- tings that the amateur may raise himself, are in most in- stances better than full-blown forced plants, costing 50c. or $1 each. This is particularly so with monthly Roses, Verbenas, and Petunias ; young plants of these, set out in May, if not more ee 3 or 6 inches high, will grow and bloom in profusion the entire summer, while those which have been forced, if they recover at all, will be greatly inferior. We plant our young Roses in May, usually in beds 4 feet wide, setting the plants 12 inches apart each way ; they begin to bloom by the middle of June, and con- tinue without interruption until checked by frost in the fall; and so with most other kinds here named ; nearly all of which are from young plants, propagated during the winter and spring months. The product of cuttings or slips from a ‘‘stock” plant varies greatly according to the kind. A good healthy plant of Fuchsia, say 18 inches high, will easily give 40 cuttings ; while a Rose or Gera- nium of the same size will not: afford half that number. A fair average for medium sized plants of those named would be 10 cuttings or slips to each plant, so that start- (2 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. ing with 100 plants in the fall, by May 1,000 would be no unreasonable increase to expect ; or in that ratio be the number more or less. If large quantities of plants are wanted for summer dec- oration by those who have neglected to propagate them, or did not wish to do so, they should purchase young plants in March or April, at which time the florists, to make room in their houses, sell them at very low rates, usually not more than one-fourth of the price that the same plants forced into bloom in May would cost. Such plants at that season are grown mainly in 2 and 38-inch pots ; if taken from these pots, say by 1st of April, and kept in any cool room or greenhouse, where the temperature will average 45° or 50° at night, by the time of setting out in May they will have formed far better plants than those pushed rapidly into flower in May. Or in other words, $10 expended in March or April, will buy one hundred plants, which, if cared for as above described, will by the middle of May be of more value than the plants $50 — would buy at that date from the same florist. CHAPTER XXII. HANGING BASKETS. Baskets in which to grow plants are now made in a great variety of styles, and of different materials. What are — known as ‘‘rustic” baskets, (fig. 26), are made with the receptacle for the earth covered mostly with laurel roots, which assume an endless variety of grotesque shapes, well fitted for giving a rustic appearance to the outer covering of the hanging basket. Then there are the different forms of wire baskets, (fig. 27), which, when used, are lined with HANGING BASKETS. 3 moss, and being thus very open, and allowing of com- plete drainage, are best suited of all for the well being of the plants. A recent invention is the ‘« Balloon” hanging basket, (fig. 28), the treltis part of which is formed of _ strips of steel; some are so arranged as to hold a common flower-pot. Many beautiful forms are made from pottery ware, colored so as to imitate stumps of wood and other objects. Thousands of these baskets areusedin some of their differ- ent forms, and many grow their plants in no other way, as plants are not only more easily managed in these, but many varieties so cultivated make a more graceful growth than is possible when they are in pots. In hanging baskets, the fall, or Dutch bulbs, of all | kinds, can be grown, giving them \ exactly the treatment recommend- ed for growing in pots on page 36. When hanging baskets are hung on the veranda or porch in sum- mer, a great quantity of water is usually required, as the dry air surrounding the basket on all sides generally drys up the soil. The simplest way of watering them when dry, in summer, is to immerse the basket in a 4 Fig. 26. RUSTIC HANGING BASKET. WIRE BASKET, Fig. 28.—BALLOON FRAME. V4. GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. pail or tub of water, so that the earth is thoroughly soaked through ; how often this immerson will be necessary will depend on the weather, the condition of the plants and the quantity of earth. If the bowl of the basket is full of roots, and the weather hot and dry, then once each day may be necessary ; while if the weather is damp and cool, it might not require watering more than once aweek. Therule with these as with all plants is—never water unless they are dry, and then water thoroughly. Just what this condition of being ‘‘ dry” is, is not quite so easy to describe ; as a rule most soils when dry become lighter in color and crumble freely between the fingers, and are free from the putty-like consistency they have when wet. The bowls of ‘‘rustic” and ‘‘'Terra Cotta” forms of hanging baskets are usually without any holes for drainage ; when such is the case, the purchaser should have a few holes, say one-fourth inch in diameter, made in the bottom of the bowl, else there is dan- ger that the earth around the roots may become satura- ted with water, unless unusual care is taken in watering. There is great diversity of taste displayed in the material with which these baskets are filled, and no special list of plants can be given that will not require to be annually changed and amended as new plants are introduced. When hanging baskets are wanted for use in shady rooms, or on shaded verandas, mosses, (selaginellas), are used, and sometimes exclusively. Then for the same condi- tions, Ivies of all sorts, Cissus, Tradescantias, Sedums or Stone Crops, Fittonias, Lysimachia or Moneywort, Vin- cas, Ivy-leaved Geraniums, Smilax, etc., as plants to droop over the sides, or to be trained to climb on the trellis work or supports of the basket, while in the center there are used upright plants, such as Draceenas of sorts, Caladiums, (if for summer), Marantas, Centaureas, Kcheverias, Ferns, Sanchezia nobilis, and other plants of — striking form or foliage. For baskets to be placed in the WINDOW GARDENING. 75 sun, or in good light, an entirely different class of plants is needed, for with the light we get flowers. As drooping plants for the edges of these, may be named Alternan- theras, Peristrophe angustifolia var., Lobelias, Tropo- lums, Mesembryanthemums, Petunias, single and double ; Passifloras, Rondeletias, Torrenias, etc., while for up- right or center plants, Achyranthes, Coleus, Begonias, Geraniums, Zonal, double, single, and variegated leaved, or any plant of not too large a growth, and which has brightness of foliage or flower. If hanging baskets are exposed to the full rays of the sun, or even partially so, covering the surface of the soil with moss from the woods will protect it from drying too quickly, and will also give the basket a neater appearance. ‘The soil used for hang- ing baskets need in no way differ from that for plants grown in pots. CHAPTER XXIII. WINDOW GARDENING. Window gardening during the summer months is much more successful in England than with us, owing to a more temperate climate, and hence is there al- most universally practised. In the cities especially, where space is economized by placing story upon story, and the buildings are so close that there is often no room for even a spear of grass to be grown, the only garden that is possible is one formed in a box on the win- dow-sill; this is limited in its extent, as the space afford- ed is only some 4 or 5 feet in length, from 8 to 10 inches wide, with a depth for the soil of about 6 inches. These boxes, are made of a great variety of materials, such as wood, terra cotta, iron, etc., according to the 16 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. taste or means of the owner. As the boxes are usually too high up to allow of a close examination, and the sides soon become draped with dropping plants, an ordinary box of pine, as in fig. 29, will answer as well as a more expensive one; as it is exposed to the weather, and the weight of the earth is considerable, it should be put to- mae null Fig. 29.—PLAIN WINDOW-BOX. gether very firmly. Having procured the box, then let a tinsmith make a lining or box of zinc that will exactly _ fit inside of it ; this needs only a few tacks at the upper edge to hold the zinc to the wood. A more expensive box, (fig. 80), is made of wood, lined with zinc, and the exterior covered with ornamental tiles, which are kept in place by a proper molding at the margins. A box of this kind may be covered with floor oil-cloth, and if a proper pattern be selected, it cannot at a few yards off be told from the much more costly tiles. Many of the streets ee iii ee HA I A ee mii o Fig. 80.—WwINDOW-BOX ORNAMENTED WITH TILES. of London and Edinburgh, during the summer months, present a pleasing appearance, that cannot fail to inter- est even those who have no taste for flowers. The plants used are mainly such as we recommend for hanging bas- kets, those designated for shady positions being used on the shady sides of the streets, and those for flowering on the sunny sides. These window gardens in summer produce PARLOR GARDENING. | ra the finest effect when planted with some drooping spe- cies. For our climate, during the summer months, when exposed to full sun, strong, vigorous-growing plants must be selected, such as Tropeolums, Petunias, Passifloras, etc. While for the same position, the upright plants may be double and single Geraniums, Heliotropes, Mignonnette, and the like. For window boxes on the shady side, use the plants recommended for hanging baskets in shade. The soil may be such as is used for pots. Wa- tering must be given as recommended for hanging bas- kets, only in the case of the window box it would not be practicable to immerse it, nor is there the same necessity for doing so, as the box is less exposed than the hanging basket, which is suspended and surrounded by drying air upon all sides. These remarks refer to window gar- dening outside of the windows, or on the outer sill. If the boxes are placed inside in winter, which they may be, the treatment recommended in chapter on ‘‘ Winter Flowering Plants,” will be applicable. CHAPTER XXIV. PARLOR GARDENING, OR THE CULTIVATION OF PLANTS IN ROOMS. Parlor Gardening has to some extent been treated of under the head of winter flowering plants, but a few ad- ditional general directions for plants not specially de- signed for winter flowering, may be acceptable. One of the first conditions essential to success is to start with healthy plants. Even all the professional skill of the florist, with all his appliances, will often fail to get a sickly plant into a healthy condition. What then can 78 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. the amateur florist expect to do in the often unequal temperature and dry atmosphere of a sitting room or parlor? Ifthe plants are purchased from the flcrist in au- tumn, to grow in the house, they are likely to be healthy, and are usually in a condition to shift into a pot one size larger ; instructions for doing this are given in the chap- ter on ‘‘ Winter Flowering Plants.” But if the plants to be cultivated in the house are such as have been growing in your own flower borders, plants that were set out in spring, and have now the full summer’s luxuriant growth still on them, then proper precaution must be taken in lifting them and placing them in pots, or the result is certain to be most unsatisfactory. What may seem to the novice a little singular, is, that the more luxuriant the growth of the plant in the open border, the more danger there is that it will wilt or die when lifted in the fall, and placed in a pot. The reason of this is obvious, when it is known that just in proportion to the top growth ofa plant is the wide-spread development of roots, and there- fore when you lift a finely-grown Geranium or Rose in October, it is next to impossible, if it is to be got into a suitable sized flower-pot, to do so without such mutila- - tion of the young roots as will certainly kill it, if precau- tion is not taken to cut off at least two-thirds of its branches. If the plant is thus potted and kept as dry as it will stand without actually withering, until it starts growth, you may hope to have a fairly healthy specimen by December, if the lifting was done in October. But this practice, though often one of necessity, is never sat- isfactory. If the plants that have done service in the borders in summer are to be used as ornaments for the parlor in fall, winter, and spring, they must have a dif- ferent treatment. All plants that are intended for future culture in rooms, should be potted in the usual way, into 5 or 6-inch pots, when set out in May or June; these pots should be set in the flower borders, but planted PARLOR GARDENING. 79 or ‘* plunged,” as it is called, so that the rim of the pot is level with the surface of the ground. ‘The plants will flower if so desired, in these pots, nearly as well as if set directly in the open ground, but if wanted for flowering in winter, they will bloom much better to have the fiow- er-buds picked off as fall approaches. It is also indispensa- bly necessary that the hole in the bottom of the pot be entirely stopped, so that the roots cannot get through. The object being to confine the roots completely within the bounds of the pot, so that when taken up in the fall to be shifted into a larger pot, the roots will be undis- turbed, and the plant will grow on unchecked. If this is not done, and the roots find their way through the bottom of the pot, there will be the same difficulty with the roots as if they had not been potted. About the best — time to take plants in-doors in this climate is the middle of October ; in colder localities, earlier, of course, and in warmer, later; always bearing in mind that the longer they can be kept in the open air, provided they are safe from frost, the better. _ Plants suited for parlor culture, - requiring a temperature of from 40° to 50° at night, with an average of 10° or 20° higher during the day are as follows. ‘These are known as greenhouse plants. For descriptions see catalogues of florists and nurserymen. Acacias, Cupheas, Azaleas, Daphnes, *Acapathus, *Echeverias, *Alternantheras, Ferns, Greenhouse, *Agvaves Feverfews *Abutil oun, #*Fuchsias, *Achyranthes, Geraniums—Pelargoniums, Ageratums, Hoyas, (wax plant), *Callas, Holland Bulbs of all kinds, Calceolarias, *Jessamines —Catalonian, Chorizema, Jessamines—Caype, Cinerarias, Ivies—parlor and hardy, *Carnations, *Txoras, Cyclamen, Lily of the Valley, Camellias, Lobelias, 80 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. *Mesembryanthemums, (wax pink), *Primulas, double and single, Mahernias, *Roses, Mimulus—Musk, *Scutellarias, *Myrsiphyllum, or Smilax, Veronicas, Oranges, Vincas, Oleanders, Violets, Petunias, Yuccas. Pinks, What are known as hot-house, or tropical plants, re- quire a higher temperature than the preceeding, and cannot be well grown unless with a night temperature of from 60° to 70°, and a day temperature of from 10° to 20° higher. The following, of most of which there are several varieties, can be found described in the cata- logues of dealers : Allamandas, Ferns, tropical, Allocasias, Heliotropes, Begonias, Hibiscus, Bouvardias, Marantas, Caladiums, Orchids, (of some kinds), Cissus, Passifloras, Clerodendrons, Peperomias, Cobeeas, Poinsettia, Crotons, Salvias, Coleus, Sanchezias, Draczenas, Torenias, Euphorbias, Tropzolums, Epiphyllums—Cactus, Tuberoses. Eranthemums, This matter of temperature has everything to do with the successful cultivation of plants in rooms, or in fact anywhere. If you attempt, for example, to grow Bou- yardias or Begonias in an average temperature of 45° at night, the plants will barely live, and will not flower, nor be healthy. On the other hand, if you subject your Camellias or Geraniums to an average of 65° at night by fire heat m winter, you are almost certain to have the flowers drop prematurely. Asarule, there are more of the plants known as greenhouse that will endure the PARLOR GARDENING. 81 high temperature necessary for the hot-house planis, than there are of the hot-house plants that can stand the low temperature, so when no distinction can be made, and a high temperature only can be had, all in the list of greenhouse plants I have marked with a * may be grown fairly in the high temperature, though they would do better in the low one. The culture of plants in rooms is already described in the chapter on ‘‘ Winter Flowering Plants,” so that I need not further allude to it, except to hint in regard to the man- ner of placing the plants. One of the cheapest and neat- est contrivances is the ‘ fold- ing plant stand,” (fig. 31). The sizes are from 3 to 6 feet wide, and 8 feet high, having from 4 to 6 shelves, and cap- ‘ able of holding from 25 to 100 plants. It is hinged so as to fold up like a camp stool, the shelves fitting in between the frames, and can be thus shipped or stowed away when not wanted, with great con- venience. Rollers can be attached to the feet, so that it may be moved about aseasily as a table. Plants, when placed on this, or similar stands, may be provided with saucers, so that the floor or carpet need not be injured while water- ing. Itis not a good plan, however, to keep water in the saucers. It is always a safer way of feeding the plant to water the soil on the top, giving only enough for it to reach the bottom, where, if any water pass through, it willbe held by the saucer. If no saucers are used, and we think plants are generally grown more safely without them, the best plan is, to take down the plants from the stand, (three times a week will usually be enough), to some place where the water will not do any injury, and give all such as appear to be dry, a good i f Fig. 31.—FOLDING PLANT STAND. 82 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. soaking ; those not so dry, water more sparingly, and give those in which the soil shows that it is wet, none what- ever. Let the water drain off, pick off any dead leaves, and replace the pots again on the stand, being careful to change them as far as possible, so that each side of the plant may get its fair share of light; if the same part is always placed to the light, the plant will soon become drawn to one side. CHAPTER XXV. WARDIAN CASES, FERNERIES, AND JARDINIERES. The forms of plant cases for the growth of such‘plants as require a moist, still atmosphere, a condition impossi- ble to obtain in a room in a dwelling-house, nor even in a greenhouse, unless it is specially @= — erected for the purpose, are numer- ous. The form commonly known j, || as the Wardian Case, (fig. 32), hag a base or tray usually of black wal- nut, about 6 inches deep, and lined | with zinc, and glass sides and top; 3 "=m these differ in size, some being as jig large as 3feet on the sides. Another jf neat and cheaper form is madeof @ } Terra Cotta, (fig. 33), or other YT earthen ware; these are usually round in eg and of various Fis- 3. —WARDIAN cast sizes, from 9 to 18 inches in diameter. In all these the plants must be covered with glass ; in the Wardian Case there is glass all around the sides and top, the top being hinged to allow the escape of excess of moisture. In the Jardinieres, or circular form, the plants are covered by a WARDIAN CASES, FERNERIES, AND JARDINIERES. 83 bell-glass which is tilted up a little at the side, when there is an appearance of excess of moisture. ‘This con. dition of excess is known by the glass becoming dimmed by moisture, and the water trickling down the side. Usually when this appearance is seen, by hee the glass lid of the Wardian Case an a. inch or so for a day, it will relieve it enough to enable it to be kept close, which is the proper way to keep it for the well being of the plants. The plants grown in this way are of kinds valued for their beauty of foliage, rather than for their flowers, and should § be such as are rather of a slow growth; all rampant growing plants, such as Co- fig ; Y WITH GLASS leus, are unsuited. The SHADE, effectiveness of these cases depend a great deal on the arrangement of the plants; the tallest and most conspic- uous things should be in the center, with smaller ones towards the edges, varying the interest by contrasting the different colorings and forms of leaves. Among the plants best suited for growing under these glass coverings, are Dracenas, Gymnostachyums, Marantas, Caladiums, some of the ornamental leaved Eranthemums, and dwarf growing Begonias, Peperomias, etc., and Ferns and Lyco- pods of the finer sorts. The most of these are plants whose natural habitat is shady woods or marshes ; and for their well being, the nearest that the Wardian Case or > Jardiniere can be made to imitate such, the better. The soil used in these cases should be light and porous. The most convenient, and a very suitable material, is the leaf-mold, which can be got in any piece of woodland. After planting, the soil should be watered freely, so that 84 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. it is settled around the roots. And to allow evaporation, ventilation should be given for a few days after the water- ing, when the glass may be put down close, only to be opened as before directed, when an excess of moisture shows on the glass. Other than this there is no trouble whatever in the management; the watering given on planting will be sufficient to keep it moist enough for 6 or 8 weeks. In winter the temperature of the room in which the Wardian case or fernery is kept may run from 50° to 70° at night. These closed cases of either kind may be used for growing Hyacinths in winter if de- sired, for which they are particularly well adapted ; only, that when brought into the room to flower, the cases will require daily ventilation. After planting the Hyacinths in the cases, however, it must not be forgot- ten that they must be kept in a cool, dark place, until they root, just as when they are grown in pots, or glasses. For further instructions on this head see Hyacinths. Lily of the Valley can also be grown finely in a Wardian case ; but as it requires some special treatment, we give it in a separate chapter. CHAPTER XXVI. WINTER FORCING THE LILY OF THE VALLEY. Within the past three years the fashion for the flowers of Lily of the Valley has increased to such an extent, that though the importation of roots has probably trebled each year, the price of the flower is still quite as high as when the forcing first begun. The failures which attend the winter flowering of this plant are mainly owing to the use of improperly developed roots. As with other WINTER FORCING THE LILY OF THE VALLEY. 85 similar plants, a certain size or development of the crown, or underground bud, is essential to produce the flower. What that size should be, is not, even with the most ex- perienced, always easy to determine. In the Tuberose, the Japan, and some other Lilies, we find that bulbs that are less than an inch in diameter, are not certain to flower. The crown, or ‘‘pip,” as florists sometimes call it, of the Lily of the Valley, when sufficiently developed to flower, should be of the size and shape shown in fig. 34. Those too small to flower are like that shown in fig. 35. But these rules as to size and shape are not given as certain, for few have had experience enough to say with accuracy at what size the crown of the Lily of the Valley will not flower, although we may say with some certainty, if the crown is large, that it will do so. It is the want of this knowledge that, in my opinion, has made the 86 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. flowering of the Lily of the Valley so uncertain when forced. As in forcing the Hyacinth, and other similar bulbs, crowns of the Lily of the Valley should be covered up outside for a few weeks, before being brought into the greenhouse or house to force. Those we flower are put in about the middle of November, packed closely to- gether in light, rich soil, in boxes three inches deep. These are covered up outside with hay until the first of Fig. 35.—LILY OF THE VALLEY BUD—POOR. January ; they are then brought into a greenhouse, facing north, where there is no direct sunlight at that season. The temperature is kept at about 70°, with a moist at- mosphere, and by the first of February they are in full flower. The Lily of the Valley could be grown finely in a Wardian case, as it would there get the proper light, with the necessary damp atmosphere. When grown in greenhouses, exposed to sunlight, it is necessary to shade GREENHOUSES ATTACHED TO DWELLINGS. 87% the glass very heavily. When the flowers are about to open, they should then have light to give the leaves a healthy green color. CHAPTER XXVII. GREENHOUSES ATTACHED TO DWELLINGS. The taste engendered by growing plants in rooms often results in a desire to have more appropriate quarters for the plants, and a greenhouse follows. This always affords the most satisfaction when it is so attached to the dwell- ing that opening a door or window from the dining- room or parlor, reveals the glories of the greenhouse. The greenhouse, when attached to the dwelling, should be always on the east, south-east, south, or south-west sides, never on the north. It may be of any length or width desired. If of ten feet width, it will cost for erec- tion from $4 to $6 per running foot, according to the character of the work. If 20 feet wide, from $8 to $10 per running foot. This is exclusive of heating, which, if done by hot-water pipes, will cost for 10 feet wide, about $4 per running foot; if 20 feet wide, about $8 per running foot. Thus to complete a conservatory, with heating apparatus, shelves, etc., 10 feet wide by 40 feet long, it would cost about $400; if 20 x 40 feet, about $800. In this estimate it isassumed that the heat- ing is to be done by the Base Burning Water-heater, of Hitchings & Co. This heating apparatus is of recent invention, and is exceedingly well adapted for the pur- pose, as the fire requires no more attention than any ordinary base burning stoves. The boiler takes up no more room than an ordinary stove, and requires no set- 88 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. ting; it is shown in fig. 36, and in section in fig. 37. Itis fed by coal from the top, and can be left with safety 10 or 12 hours without any attention. It must be borne in mind that in constructing the conservatory it must be built where a chimney is accessible by which to carry off the smoke from the boiler or water heater, just as would — — ———— ——— z= —.-—- -- —y Fig. 36.—BASE-BURNER. Fig. 37.—sECTION. be necessary for an ordinary stove. If the green- house is small enough to be heated from a register from the furnace that heats the dwelling, much of the cost may be saved, as it will be seen that nearly half of the cost of construction is the heating apparatus. Figure 38 shows a front elevation of a conservatory suitable to GREENHOUSES ATTACHED TO DWELLINGS. 89 ETE. VE M = auRSap RE EN eer [ol fp ee oa BEE Sy 8s Sali '6lL Wn SSS ASS SSS SSS ade a << Fig. 39.—GROUND PLAN OF CONSERVATORY, Fic. 38. 90 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. — attach to dwellings; this is 16 feet wide and 30 feet in length. Its ground plan showing the arrangement of the benches and walks, is given in fig. 89. Such a structure in every way complete, heated with Hitchings Base Burn- ing water-heater, should not exceed $600. CHAPTER XXVIII. A DETACHED GREENHOUSE OR GRAPERY. In cases where more extended glass structures are de- sired, they are better if detached from the dwelling. The structure now given in figs. 40 and 41 is called a curvilinear span-roofed house, 100 feet in length by 20 in width ; fig. 40 shows the end view and plan, and fig. 41 gives sufficient of the elevation to show the end anda part of the side. ‘The ends should face north and south, so that the distribution of the sun’s rays will be equal on each side. Of course there is nothing arbitrary in the size, it may be made 50, 75, or 100 feet in length, or 20 to 25 feet in width as desired, and may be used either for the purposes of a vinery for the growing of foreign grapes, or for a conservatory as desired. All the walling from the surface of the ground to the glass of a greenhouse, had better be made of wood, unless the walls are made very thick when built of brick orstone ; the continued warfare in winter between a zero temperature outside, and 60° to 70° inside, will in a year or two destroy brick or stone walls. When the walls are formed of wood, the best way is to place locust posts at distances of four feet apart, and nail to these a sheathing of boards; against the boards tack asphaltum or tarred paper, and again against that, place the weather-boarding. This forms a wall A DETACHED GREENHOUSE OR GRAPERY. 91 pe on : ATTTUUTAUTTT 7 l TT | a i Wii Wil | i! Ht - HA = A \ NSN \ MS NS N \ WIQG N SN AK QV WN AWN GG ~~ \\ SS \ \ \\ _ \ Fig. 40.—aND-VIEW AND PLAN OF DETACHED GREENHOUSE OR GRAPERY. Le : if} , LN, I ari \ —— Mu GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. W ETE il ae V iN 2e Coe ae Wee ES ° y is} res 4 bP a ie] D w ci i>] ro) q ™m rs A DETACHED GREENHOUSE OR GRAPERY. 93 which, if kept painted, will last for 50 years, and is equally warm as a 12-inch brick wall, and costs less than half. We have had just such a structure in use for the past five years as a cold vinery, that is having no heating apparatus, the forwarding being done only by the action of the sun on the glass, and it has proved a cheap and satisfactory luxury. A conservatory or grapery of this style costs from $10 to $15 per running foot, without heating apparatus. Heated by hot water, it would cost $20 to $30 per running foot. If heated by ahorizontal flue in the manner here described, the cost will be only about $15 per running foot. Any good bricklayer should be able to build a smoke-flue from the following instructions. Let the bars for the grate be, (if for a glass surface of say 500 square feet), 2 feet in length and about 10 inches in width ; or in the proportion of about one-half a square inch of grate surface to one square foot of glass. Most masons of any experience know how to build a greenhouse flue, but there are afew important points, the knowledge of which is absolutely necessary to complete success. ‘First, the furnace pit, if not naturally dry, must be made so by draining. After setting the grate- bars in the usual way by resting them on an iron plate, let into the brick work at front and back, the sides of the furnace should be built with fire-brick and fire clay if at all procurable, to the hight of from 10 to 20 inches, according to size wanted. On these walls an arch is turned over to cover the furnace; the ‘‘neck” of the furnace rising at a sharp angle for from 2 to 4 feet until it ig run into the horizontal smoke-flue. The flue must be raised from the ground an inch or two on bricks or flagging. This costs perhaps a third more in building, but it allows all sides of the flue to give off heat. The cheapest and simplest form of flue is made after the bot- tom is formed by bricks or flagging ; brick is best near the furnace, as flagging would crack. Place two bricks 94 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. on edge, the top being covered by a brick laid flat; this is the smallest size of flue. Jarger grate surface will re- quire correspondingly greater hight and breadth. Flues are now commonly made by using cement or vitrified drain pipe, to connect with the brick flue, at from 25 to 40 feet from the furnace, the pipe not being safe to use near the furnace, as the greater heat would be likely to crackit. A flue, to get the full benefit of the fuel, should be so arranged that it goes all around the greenhouse, the base of the chimney being the top of the furnace. The advantage of this plan, (fig. 42), which has only recent- ly had general publicity, is that the excessive heat given out from the top of the furnace, drives back the cold air that would otherwise pass down the chimney; not only FRONT BENCH FURNAG E 4% FEET WIDE Lig. 42.—PLAN OF GREENHOUSE HEATED BY DOUBLE FLUES. drives it back, but passing rapidly out, ‘‘ draws” to it the heated air that has to pass through the length of the horizontal flue, causing it to circulate so rapidly that all - parts of the flue become nearly equally heated. In the case represented in fig. 42, the greenhouse so heated is 20 feet wide by 100 feet long, having a glass sur- face of over 2,500 square feet, a size utterly impossi- bie to heat with a flue unless so constructed that the base of the chimney stands on the top of the furnace. It will be seen by the plan that there are two flues running from one furnace, and entering into one chimney. I only il- lustrate this to show the power given by this method. It would do quite as well, if the house was half or quarter the size, to have it done by one flue instead of the two. I would here say emphatically that no matter HEATING BY HOT WATER. 95 what size a flue may be, and whether single or double, it should in every case be made on the principle of being carried all around the building until it enters the upright chimney built on the top of the furnace. CHAPTER XXIX. HEATING BY HOT WATER. Although we describe flues as a means of heating green- houses or graperies, they should be used only on the score of economy ; whenever one can afford to have the heat- ing done in the best manner, by all means let it be done by hot water. The hot-water apparatus requires less attention than flues, and its management isso simple that any one able to take care of an ordinary stove or furnace can take charge of a boiler for heating the water in the pipes of a greenhouse. Besides, there is no danger from smoke or gas, and but little risk from fire. Inside the greenhouse there is no danger from fire; if they are filled with water the pipes cannot be made hot enough to ignite the most combustible substances that may come in contact with them. With the smoke flue it is very dif- ferent, dry wood or other combustible material will ignite if allowed to touch the brick, anywhere within 20 to 40 feet of the furnace. There are a great many patterns of boilers, and to recommend one more than another may seem invidious ; still we have had in use quite a number of different styles, and have found that, as far as our experience with them has gone, these made by Hitchings & Co., of New York, everything considered, have been most satisfactory. We have several of these boilers in use that have not cost a dollar for repair in ten years. GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. 96 ANIWA L i o¢x0SG ASNOH LOH : I | Fig. 48.—PLAN OF HOT-HOUSE AND GREENHOUSE COMBINED. WOOYU YYOM » HONJA INILLOd HEATING BY HOT WATER. 97 Figure 43 gives the ground plan of a combined hot-house and greenhouse, each 20 feet wide and 50 feet long, show- ing the disposition of the boiler and pipes. If this plan were shown in full on the page, the oe would be quite too small, there- fore a portion of the length Pee Sia ane ae = is left out of each dorapait PTT TT) Re ~ ment, as shown by the ir- regular lines; everything is given in proper proportion except the length, and that jul {I LLL : is stated in figures. The & SORT number of pipes indicated, f | “COAL CELLAR (10), is sufficient to give a temperature of from 60° to pip. pF pres or Fia. 43, 70° at night for the hot- AT BOILER PIT. house, and the number given in the greenhouse, (6), is such as will keep that compartment at from 40° to 50° in the coldest weather. A sectional view at the end where : the boiler pit is placed is given in fig. 44, and an- other sectional view at the partition between the greenhouse and hot-house © is shown in fig. 45.. The - cost of such a structure complete for the reception 7) co =] | i 6' 6" 2! ner m°} A | RRRMU EY I 2"QMc— 6/6" i Fig. 45.—END-VIEW OF FIG. 43, AT PARTITION BETWEEN THE TWO of plants, would vary ac- HOUSES. i ° cording to location, and the style of finish; in the vicinity of New York at pres- ent prices, such a combined hot-house and greenhouse, 20x100, erected in a substantial manner, would cost about $3,000. 98 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. CHAPTER XXX. GREENHOUSES OR PITS, WITHOUT ARTIFICIAL HEATING. The directions given for heating greenhouses by hot water or by flues, apply of course only to sections of the country where the temperature during the winter months makes heating a necessity. In many of the southern states there is no need of artificial heat. A greenhouse tightly glazed and placed against a building where it is sheltered from the north and north-west will keep out frost when the temperature does not fall lower than 25 degrees above zero, and if light wooden shutters are used to cover the glass, all those classed as ‘‘ greenhouse” plants will be safe even at 10 Pai degrees lower, provided, of eer course, that the conservatory \ is attached to the dwelling, \\j; as shown in fig. 38. Another - | cheap and simple method 4). of keeping plants during <= SEEK winter in mild latitudes is by Fig. 46.—SUNKEN PIT. the use of the sunken pit or deep frame, which affords the needed protection even more completely than the eleva- ted greenhouse. This is formed by excavating the soil to the depth of from 18 to 36 inches, according to the size of the plants it is intended to contain. A convenient width is 6 feet, the ordinary length of a hot-bed sash, and of such length as may be desired. Great care must be taken that the ground is such that no water will stand in the pit ; if the soil is moist it should be drained. The sides of the pit may be either walled up by a 4 or 8-inch course of brick work, or planked up as may be preferred, — but in either case the dack wall should be raised about eighteen inches, and the front about six inches above the COMBINED CELLAR AND GREENHOUSE. 99 surface, in order to give the necessary slope to receive the sun’s rays and to shed the water. A section of such a pit is shown in fig. 46. Ifa pit of this kind is made in a dry and sheltered position, and the glass covered by light shutters of half-inch boards, it may be used to keep all the hardier class of greenhouse plants, even in locali- ties where the thermometer falls to zero. CHAPTER XXXII. COMBINED CELLAR AND GREENHOUSE. In connection with the description of the cold pit or greenhouse without fire heat, may be mentioned the com- bined cellar and greenhouse. Many years ago an acci- dental circumstance gave me an opportunity of testing the utility of such a structure. An excayation of 20 feet by 40 had been made 7 feet deep, and walled up with stone and beams laid across preparatory to placing a building upon it, when the owner changed his plans and found himself with this useless excavation within a dozen yards of his costly residence. There seemed to be no al- ternative but to fill it up or plank it over, but both plans were objectionable, and in discussing how to get out of the difficulty, I suggested erecting a low-roofed green- house over it, as the owner had a taste for cultivating plants. This suggestion was followed, and the walls were raised one foot above the surface and a span-roofed green- house erected over it. My idea, (which was found to be nearly correct), was, that the large volume of air in the excavation would at no season go below 40°, and be sufficient to keep the up- per or greenhouse portion of the structure above the 100 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. freezing point in the coldest weather. This it did com- pletely when the glass was covered at night with shut- ters; and the plants with which it was filled, of a kind requiring a low temperature, kept in better health than if they had been grown in a greenhouse having fire Heat. Now, although I have never seen such a combination since, I am satisfied that in favorable circumstances such a structure might be made of great utility and at a trifling cost, for as it dispenses with heating apparatus, which usually is more than half of the whole cost in all greenhouses, the use of a cellar and greenhouse could be had at probably less than the cost of an ordinary green- house ; and for half hardy plants—plants that will do well in winter if kept only above the freezing point—such a greenhouse will be better for many of them than any kind of greenhouse heated by fire heat. All kinds of Roses, Camellias, Azaleas, Zonal Geraniums, Violets, Cape Jessamines, Carnations, Abutilons, Verbenas, Prim- ulas, Stevias, and, in short, all plants known as cool greenhouse plants, will keep in a healthy, though nearly dormant condition, during the winter months, but they will flourish with greatly increased vigor at their natural season of growth, and flowering as spring advances. Be- sides, the cellar may be used for the ordinary purposes of such a place ; or if exclusively for horticultural purposes, no better place can be had for keeping all deciduous hardy or half hardy plants, Hyacinths in pots to start to flower, or any bulbs of similar nature. The great point to be observed is that the soil where such a structure is to be erected is entirely free from water, or if not so nat- urally, must be made entirely dry by draining. The style that I think would suit best for general pur- poses would be twelve feet in width, and of any length desired. The excavation should not be less than seve feet deep, walled up to about one foot above the surface. When complete it would show something like the section COMBINED CELLAR AND GREENHOUSE. 101 in fig. 47. If the glass roof is made fixed it should have ventilating sashes 3 x 8, at intervals of six or nine feet on each side of the roof; if of sashes, they should be seven feet long by three feet wide, every alternate one being arranged to move for ventilation in the usual way. The position of the structure would be best with its ends north Va eee i -- = 7 v a5 N « ' ri i \ — = = a a a E a = (eS ae SS = : ~ cT.) + tee 1 = = = Si hpi a = — == —— Ww. ———— - —— —— =e = = ee SS ae a ee a ——— ns Ts —— 2S a —__ le —- —= seis Z ceed = SSS SS SS = ——— Saas = SSS SSS SS — — = Fig. 4 4, —GREENHOUSE AND CELLAR COMBINED. and south. The shutters for covering the glass at night should be made of light half-inch pine oh three feet wide by seven feet long. It will be understood that the nisuncade of this com- bination of cellar and greenhouse over the ordinary cold pit is that the air of the greenhouse is warmed or equal- ized by mixing with the atmosphere of the cellar, which will rarely be less than 40°. For the same reason, if a high temperature by fire heat were wanted, say 70°, this large body of air from below of 40° would make it diffi- cult to obtain it. It will be necessary, of course, to have the flooring boards covering the cellar wide enough apart to freely allow the passage of the air; this will at the same time give light enough for any operations necessary to be done in the cellar. 102 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE, CHAPTER XXXII. HOT-BEDS. The sunken pit described on page 98 may be readily converted into a hot-bed; all that is necessary to do be- ing to place hot manure or other heating material in the pit and tread it moderately firm with the feet. The ma- nure should fill the pit to the depth of two feet, and then be covered with five or six inches of light rich soil, on which to sow the seed. This sunken pit prevents the escape of heat from the manure much better than when the hot-bed is made on the surface in the usual way. The preparation of the heating material for the hot-bed requires some attention. It should be manure fresh from the horse-stable, and when they can be procured, it is better to mix it with about an equal bulk of leaves from the woods. If the weather is very cold, the bulk of ma- nure must be of good size, from five to six wagon loads, thrown in a compact conical heap, else the mass may be so chilled that fermentation cannot take place and no heat generated. If a shed is convenient, the manure may be placed there, especially if the quantity is small, to be protected from cold until the heat begins to rise. The heap should be turned and well broken up before being used for the hot-beds, so that the rank steam may escape and the manure become of the proper ‘‘ sweet- ened” condition for the healthy germination of the seeds. After the manure has been packed in the pit to the depth and in the manner described, the sashes should be placed on the frame and kept close until the heat is again gen- erated in the hot-bed. Now plunge a thermometer into the manure, and if all is right it will indicate 100 degrees or more, but this is yet too hot as bottom heat for the growth of seeds or plants, and a few days of delay must HOT-BEDS. 103 be allowed until the thermometer indicates a falling of 10 or 15 degrees, then the soil may be placed upon the manure and the seeds sown, or plants set out in the hot- bed. Amateurs are apt to be impatient in the matter of hot-beds, and often lose their first crop by sowing or planting before the first violent heat has subsided. An- other very common mistake is, in beginning too early in the season. In this latitude nothing is gained by begin- ning before the first week in March, and the result will be very nearly as good if not begun until a month later. There are two or three important matters to bear in mind in the use of hot-beds. It is indispensable for safety to cover the glass at night with shutters or mats until all danger of frost is over, for it must be remem- bered that the contents of a hot-bed are always tender from being forced so rapidly by the heat below, and that the slightest frost will kill them. Again, there is danger of overheating in day-time by a neglect to ventilate when the sun is shining. Asa general rule it will be safe in all the average days of March, April, and May, to have the sash in the hot-bed tilted up from an inch to three inches at the back from 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. Much will, of course, depend upon the activity of the heating ma- terial in the hot-bed, the warmth of the weather, and the character of the plants in the bed; so that we can only give a loose general rule. Numbers of our amateur friends come to us every season lamenting that them- selves or their men in charge had omitted to ventilate their hot-bed, and on their return home from business at night, found all the contents had been ‘‘ boiled” up. Or the complaint may be on the other extreme, that the plants are frozen through neglect to cover them at night. A hot-bed requires a certain amount of attention, which must be given at the right time, or failure is certain. 104 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. CHAPTER XXXII. SHRUBS, CLIMBERS, AND TREES. A place is seldom so small that a few choice shrubs cannot appropriately find room, and in which climbers are not desirable, while in the larger places these become important to its proper ornamentation. Whether its size admits of the use of trees or not, both deciduous and evergreen shrubs, climbers as well as evergreen trees of low growth, are indispensable. We here append a list of the leading kinds in each class, but which by no means exhausts the number of desirable varieties ; for the oth- ers reference may be made to the catalogues of the prin- cipal nurseries, where also will be found descriptions of those here named. HARDY DECIDUOUS SHRUBS. Amygdalus nana fl. Pl... scccscecccccces Flowering Almond. LAESCUIURDATUTNONG,. era's \colecels e's sols vieie'e® Dwarf Horsechestnut. BOP DET ES DRUG OIES bate elaberw pinicl eleva e's 4, barberry: 13 Abi BONE 3 DUI PIU CR «5a aot aleve Purple Barberry. Calycanthiis floridus. .. 0s. .ccccccecces Sweet-scented Shrub. Chionanthas” Vir Ginted cise s cise's ces c0 Fringe Tree. CYCLES SCLONGOLUB ioe oe Pahce ssp a bie, sess bios Laburnum. Cotoneaster microphylla... .ccecccesece Small-leaved Cotoneaster. Crateegus Pyracantha, 6.0 ...0ccececasees Pyracanth Thorn. Hs OLYACAMAD SL. Mae bs sons ces Hawthorn double white. 6 “ coccinea fl. pl..... e Ae Scarlet. CUI AMI SOUL. « « o\5'50 cher wine ois aioli es White Alder. PD RICHE SCANT 7s, =, 5 sak siateu s sie wibie Pk snes Rough Deutzia. ce phe OTL Jl OU areas wists fo 6 aisles Bistarcke Double 207 REC IQNACHES Sidke-o% 35 stick 4 sae e eee ee Slender ‘ HwonyMmus atropurpureus ....cecccccees Burning Bush. ee MOL OWUS cain ice Sowa eeeane ss Broad-leaved do. Horsythia Viridissima.....ccccccccescces Golden Bell. SEIQICSWL TELTODICTE..5 . s), bs ana cc pekeens Silver: (<< Hibiscus Syriacus fl. plicesecccecedesees Rose of Sharon, double. Hydrangea paniculata grandiflora....... Great-panicled Hydrangea. ak TTOMCH SO. «Sule ee ee Common “ “ DEDONICE ; . oy:stecs Danvers e oe oe Japan He TEPID IAPONICT Ss Six o'e's vec an ee wale Japan Globe-flower. Lonicera Fartaricd........06. oseooeeess. Lartarian Honeysuckle. SHRUBS, CLIMBERS, AND TREES. 105 TEEGROTUG QUEUE oo: x:n'ap due ie's ase g's Odes Sweet Bay Magnolia. ee CONEPCIAD ates 3 «= 8 cs ces se bee Yulan Tree. pe SOMANRG OMG: Ia Fy isa 0 os ate wwe Soulanges’ Magnolia. Philadelphus corvonarius.......00ceeeeee Mock Orange. - LN) = Sie ae Oe “y A Dwarf. PRUCR UT OUME® «os steimtcinis's sod v's 9 58a 2 02 3% Missouri Currant. De py GARG OTOUMILUNG 255.5) < waite ine Mareen aras Gordon’s “ UTNE VIAGATI « 5. a. ona ha ons ae slnaee Common Lilac. “ C © \ GUB. nc sce sekcencer nese White 7 < WERT SUCH ate 2 5 hee cians d awa ted aaaate Persian & es Sor GENO 3 ca mradal eateue he aeroe s “f- White. Spirwa prunifolia fl. pl... cic ccceccccas Plum-leaved Spirxa. 60 callosa Gnd Var. G00 .c0s cicue case Flat-topped us SRO RLCNCME PE. Wea as idiaewemat ndetes Lance-leaved ‘ EePee EMMESASEN Shae. Soest cca singe Douglas’ a : Sete VUTICUUCE OUUL oi. « 2in'o.2 206! a0. m'=\nlaa dials St. Peter’s Wreath. Viburnum Opulus.. ... ere ROE Snowball. Ee PR MCMNE rn 2 eras) 4 ove eiapara aie Dwarf Snowball. WERE TAREE. ome ao in Sms eh gen sien Bush-Honeysuckle, Rose. Se er MOL MET «Ses oe g's c's ple daatws ot'e-s * i Variegated. rita (1), ee a re eee EP - os White. ae EME Ayal alnal thats a clap siae woe as oe ale 7 “3 Lovely. CO) ROTI UD oo ou, Fete sl my's ww deem 6 oc Debois’. Azalea Pontica, HybTIdS,.. 20.62.20. 60's Belgian Azaleas. CORES SAO Fare ods ee wie stews aes ales Japan Judas Tree. DUtUs. ARPONICIN fain Uae wevinn odes Am Japan Quince. PFURUS OWOOD, a oa. cles oralanent Sa A Flowering Plum. ORAL TEE: PONT AGY TONG Sea Cecsieie aleye'e 6 wins 0 Stuartia. Symphoricarpus TAaceMOSus...++.+0+ .....Snowberry. HARDY EVERGREEN SHRUBS. Andromeda floribunda. ......ceeeeesees Free-flowering Andomeda. Buxus sempervirens arbored........ oeites bree- Box: EOLA TIIO TUBES RE rie SE ats wie anid oi < v's om we Eastern Arbor-Vite. P Cephalotaxus Fortunti....ccceccecseeees PA PRMO\CHOOTUN Es fais ad ae caes ses eng a 3 Garland Flower. WG. OPM. ors da RABI vw rergneiinr ea Se American Holly. Juniperus communis var. Suecica........ Sweedish Juniper. e * OO EAA CUNACD, <> aco Trish e ae oblonga pendula.........2000. Weeping ~- Cc Squamala. . vs0. 6338 Pia iw thay are Scaled Juniper. Se hee! SRORIIE i Io Lay cae nee a Prostrate ‘‘ Tia VAMOS? |< 3.2 Satsin a Ne cian eles American Laurel. Fudocaepus JGPORICG so. 00's imncooannen Japan Yew. Retinispora obtusa.........++++.+.....:Obtuse-leaved Retinispora. “ plumosa AUTEM. .... 2... eee Golden-plumed ‘“ Rhododendron Catawbiense, hybrids.....Rhododrendons. 106 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. Taxus baccata, var. Canadensis......... American Yew. ig 4 WS DOFECUG ..< aidasdia hada ee Upright - LUISE OCCULENLUUIS 3 sic’ ke Selatan aloe rates 4-6 American Arbor-vite. ss Oo SEP SCOUT an doss care Siberian fe bya “ 66 LIES | ACL ta hat ahh Plicate es o a ED Sod aCe ao toa bee dae Dwarf ss as HARDY EVERGREEN TREES OF MEDIUM SIZE. MUS \CONMANSIB 2, vin wes oss sine ec umnee’ Hemlock Spruce. 6 - WEE, SATIN... neces as Sargent’s ‘ Ee pe HERERO oraicich crn ie Seskeis ewieiave oe, niess Sciore Norway “ “6 vel URE: GTEGOLYMI «2 ies, ole eas Gregory’s ‘“ 66 Be os, OMOEA ae Dae oiier Dwarf ee 6 Pats Ghee QMMANORERE catre'p. Ss utc ah ee Inverted ‘ SESAME SUITE, ot nies asd asa ed Sie + Dwarf Black Spruce. s* Fraseri var. Hudsonica........... Hudson’s Bay Fir. Re MIPEC GUE sctersiatpe's Saye ici ie casas European Silver Fir. 6s PONDERS” SASUOUEE sc os cins Erect $ ie CMe saat Ae Gu Monels sats be ce eke Siberian ‘“ &s Juniperus Virginiana,......ccccecceses Red Cedar. BEATER TISUNODUS <.-cnee 2.0 cipscin'c's sion bis aa eT § White Pine. Seat SC CMU Ect etcetera cine cichacs Bie aise @ Swiss Stone Pine. OO DUNO Sac « ohn 'csk < oven wide seeie Dwarf Pine. Oe RULER ULC alee ic,coy cians OO bint a presets Austrian ‘‘ HARDY CLIMBERS. Ampelopsis quinquefolia...- ...c..ee0ee Virginia Creeper. tricuspidata, ( Vietchii)....... Vietch’s eS NEUE QUINGIE. . 62 ASK, wg ca wlee dn nean Akebia. Mristolochia Siphor: Me.e oan ac one os vase Dutchman’s Pipe. Bignonia grandiflora........ceceseccees Large-flowered Trumpet vine HEMGS AO UANONUNGS Sei So ase eee coe 9 we Virgin’s Bower. Vom UMN GURCCH G(T ROR emacs wisnas « % x ‘‘ azurea, and the various hybrids. Hedera Helizx..... PAG LIE. atlas hou Cena ak European Ivy. This in its many varieties is scarcely hardy at New York. 5 Lonicera sempervirens ......ceececececes Trumpet Honeysuckle. Bh TAMOTCDs eiie Reon. Be stays whee Japan s A Se UR SOENCM, Pe 3 Pons tele Golden ‘ AS TERY MENUM ED oka. hea English Woodbine. 3 as var. Belgica...... Dutch Honeysuckle. BEN PUND IE co. 5 aI oe wine haste Hall’s “ PECOMED PAUICUNE. «.'3 . Jaslona eis senna eRe Trumpet Creeper. Wistaria frutescens......ccccescececcoes American Wistaria. TCMOIMEIMS . ii ox selon ceaetwey Chinese ee $s Be PROT: OAD. a ranc pce ee White 4 as fe Alentiie eoe Allen’s “6 BO AIOE S's oa ce bee ooosevcc.-dhagnificent HARDY HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS. 107 CHAPTER XXXIV. HARDY HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS. % Herbaceous perennials include those hardy plants, the stems of which die down at the approach of winter, or earlier if they have completed their growth; the roots being hardy, they remain in the same place for several years in succession. Plants of this class were formerly more popular than they have been of late years, the taste for brilliant bedding effects having caused these former favorites to be neglected. Recently the taste for peren- nials has revived, and while they cannot serve as substi- tutes for what are known as bedding plants, they are ex- ceedingly useful for those who wish to have flowers with but little trouble, as most of them can remain for three or four years without requiring any other care than to keep them clear of weeds. When the clumps become too large they require to be lifted, divided, and re-set in fresh soil. For the best results it is advisable to re-set most of them every third year, while some may remain in place indefinitely, taking care to give them a yearly manuring, as the vigorous growing ones soon exhaust the soil imme- diately around them. In setting out these plants, the taller growing kinds should be placed at the rear of the border, or in the center if the bed is to be seen from both sides, while those of the lowest growth are to be placed at the edge, and those of intermediate size are to be placed between. A proper selection of these plants will - give a succession from early spring until frost stops all bloom. Many of these perennials are unchanged from their natural state, but bloom in our borders just as they appeared in their native woods and hills in different parts of the world, and seem to show no disposition to ‘‘ break” 108 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. or deviate from their normal form, notwithstanding they have been in cultivation for a century or two. On the other hand many have, by sporting, or by hybridizing, and crossing, as in the case of ponies, phloxes, irises, and others, produced many florists varieties, which show forms and colors not found in the native state of the plants, and the frequent occurrence of double flowers among them shows that cultivation has not been without its influence. With such a number to select from, it is difficult to make a list of 25, or even 50, and not leave out many de- sirable kinds. Those in the following list are all of gen- erally admitted excellence, and are usually to be obtained from florists and nurserymen. It may be added here that there is no part of the coun- try which does not afford wild flowers of sufficient beauty to merit a place in the garden, and most of them, except perhaps those which naturally grow in a deep shade, will grow larger and bloom finer in a rich border than in their native localities. Perennials are propagated by division of the clumps, by cuttings of the stems, and sometimes of the roots, and by seeds. In many cases the seeds are very slow of germination unless sown as soon as ripe. As most of them do not bloom until the seedlings haye made one year’s growth, the seeds should be sown in a reserve bed, from which at the end of the first summer, or in the fol- lowing spring, they may be transplanted to the place where they are to flower. It is well to give the seedlings some protection the first winter, not because they are not hardy, but to prevent them from being thrown out of the soil by frequent freezing and thawing. A covering of evergreen boughs is most suitable, but if these are not at hand, use coarse hay or other litter, first laying down some brush, to keep the covering from matting down pon them. HARDY HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS. 109 Avanti: NOPHUS . o's. nnisiac slime ewe wees Monkshood. ee VETICGOOUNT so 2 sie vais is vine sé 8 Variegated Monkshood. BROMONE SOPONICE 6 falc daa smc oa o's Oe oe es Japan Windflower. oO UEP. LLONCTAREIOUCLT «, xs. 0: = «0/0 «0 White Japan ‘“ OOS RESCUER ah aa dak 0, doje «6,9 Pasque Flower. Pe IE CTA Sa ne ee Alpine Columbine. ae CLINE Ct orgie oS ine 4 dctaye sae Rocky Mt. ‘ Sf pt ORT RAML RE said os b 55,5 55's 4 « Golden-spurred Columbine. “© -ynlgarigs aka s Be rtd Son ae) Garden . PAREC TAP OUNCE: 2255 Weweiwietgaw joecokns os (Incorrectly Spireea.) Aspervla OGOTdHG 0 002cdecsecesicccess Woodruff. Baptisia australis 5.2.6.6 cece Shans cece False Indigo. Campanula Carpathica............0000% Carpathian Harebell. Sf Le Peach-leayed ‘“ Sea Nant HAIN LOT isu ha wae sacs, 578 2 Great-flowered ‘‘ and others. Cassia: MG THAN Qici svi ccineica ds cece seas Wild Senna. CUR OR OV OME 5 BI ead ain 5:00 Seta ee Upright Clematis. See TRIE POUIE ate ihia-a aise aan cas Entire-leayed ‘ Colchicum autummnadle..........cceeeees Meadow Saffron. Convallarvid Majais 02. oo. oe sew ee ee veo Lily of the Valley. Delphinium elatum. 200-0 ccececescece Bee Larkspur. = UMC me la acc Oe ale apa oa Scarlet ‘ and others. Dianthus PluMarius...ccececreecesecees Garden Pink. COPS BUMP OWS a also se ohla dwn, 2 0'e aie a Fringed ‘‘ DCR E: CRAG. 12s silo < BO Ashes Plumy Dicentra. 66> SNECLADIAS. «00 woo oo se Sean Bleeding Heart. zi Dictamnus Framinelld......ce.cceeeees Fraxinella. Dodecatheon Meadia.......eceeees- ....-Am. Cowslip. Eranthis hiemalis.........ccceeeeeeees Winter Aconite. ’ BVICd CAPNED...-..cccccenncccocsccsres Winter Heath. FPurnkia ovata......cccccceesecececesees Blue Day Lily. 66 TAPONICH. 2. coc sse were ceee ones Japane~ .. 6 Gypsophila paniculatd......+-++++2e00s Panicled Gypsophila. Helleborus Niger......cccccececceccces Christmas Rose. Hepaticd triloba. .. 1c. ce cov wccecnse cscs Liver-leaf. a Dc pct roe es Gane teene a Double do. Dberis Gar Qlea7r ics... ie bc viece eric ce tees Gibraltar Candytuft. 66 SCMPETUITENS.\. ood acs weescse'e con Perennial wg Tris Germanicd......seceeeeeeeeees+-+-German Flower de Luce. CESS BAGPICB OS see cnt «Sane Pe means ea ae Iberian sf oh, oe SOT PINIMG: 5 ago ats He 5 eet Ee eae Dwarf yes SOEs and many others of a great range of colors. 3 Didtris spicata .. 5... csceece cera ceseeses Blazing Star. 66. SYUATTOSH..c0cccserecees ELE 8 Cores sf and others. 110 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. DRG CUTAN... oie ols wtehc are Gold-banded Lily, this, with many other Japanese species in the catalogues, is perfectly hardy, and there should be a good collection of them in every garden. EUNM PCV ENNEs.«\ <5 rad hehe eer iate aie re Perennial Flax. Dabelia CAPGINGUS .\. Foic\ is SaaS wheiete tale s's Cardinal Flower. This native, (also its hybrids), does perfectly well in the drier soil of the garden. Lrpinus polepRylls. «o.oo vin vesicccccee Many-leaved Lupine. Laychinis CRALCCAONIEG «0:6 oo ooin ss eserves ¢ Scarlet Lychnis, and several others. Lysimachia nummularid....ccceccceees Moneywort. Mertens VeGunee. Ss ok was een c cece dee Virginia Lungwort. MiosoliS POVUSPTS soins gai eivw te wtorww vs Forget-me-not. as AP OPIEH cite calle taly ere laid tn hee tale Azorian Forget-me-not. Oe) AONSSI OTOL SAC Ss Soin ls ascwiagttounetes Early TORRES. «See ING CRESS OULOTUS reais 2 oa aia acs vo sien Primrose Peerless. ak IOLECUS te NERS rats ate a Savoie 'Ghotetave Poet’s Narcissus. “ DOTA Ra 'e o2n wlaleantereures Jonquil. ge ERCUMO-TUATCISBUS...2)< 0a satvive-a1Sielehe Daffodil, .in double and single varieties. Ginothera Missouriensis........ 000000005 Missouri Evening Primrose. PIPONUE OPUCURAIAS E50 2 wie speheicio'Grw ojeierore Common Peony, and the various hydrids of this and other species,of which there are many fine named sorts. Preonia tenutfona. 00. ce cece ss ocomaeae Fennel-leaved Peony. $6 Moutan....... IE Setinntoerclnnantevegers Tree af of which there are many named varieties. EAIDQUET OVONUBE 9h LLIE Se Shahar ai ciara eierw occa Qriental Poppy. Pentstemon grandiflorus........ 0.00000. Large-flowered Pentstemon. oe barbatus var. Torreyi........ Torrey’s i | Re PRION E SCOR ces obs daeaiekolon-s Palmer’s * anc several other hardy species. Pitlor, HETPRCCOUG «a ei3c.0% «ei cre cs .....French Lilac. Under this head a great number of florists named varieties may be had. New ones are offered every year, and a good selection of colors makes a grand show. FOE SULDUNGUEE 22 ciate oi alala a's bie Cote ove 0-siniai Moss Pink. - Also the white variety. EVICMOTIUIR TEPLONS 6 Foo. ca ncwiwak cack Jacc)’s Ladder. ¥ COYUMCUM ire cee ecneeadees Greek Valerian. Re ITEDBR ONDE 2s a one 52 Graain 3S ss islensicreiseeuete Eng. Cowslip. This and the Polyanthus varieties need a moist and shady place. RF cortusoides is hardy, and P. Japonica probably so. PVE CAPRCUM. . . 5 ov. Lone ceases Cees Rosy Pyrethrum, the new double varieties. Saxifraga crassifolia ........ da/kb oapangaie Thick-leaved Saxifrage. ee COVAISOliA. . 6. csececeeceeess sdeeart-leavyed sa HARDY HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS. Tat GENTE COTE 63a Sone cel ds Yo pea Stone crop. ‘¢ Sieboldit Gud WAU Jae as opiate cite Siebold’s Stone crop. Sete AIILCHICTES Aas fiteiaidais) nase 3/0),0 050) Beautiful ‘‘ cs Peta OCR Te cetera eae one a pei aiape Showy - a and a large number of others, presenting a great variety in foliage and flowers. Sempervivum arachnoideum,......s00000- Cobweb Houseleek. ce CONCEAL OLUT aise oeralainGis ails se 3 Purple-tipped ‘‘ 2 CLOT UE =o os ewapes oes Sp Common ss Of these curious plants there are more than 50 species in cultivation, and all perfectly hardy ; useful on rock-work. Spirea filipendula, (and double)........ Dropwort. Pot GMA ge 3 cae ecsas so n14 Smt ee eee Palmate Spirea. ci weet O00 97): ee oe Ea OER Queen of the Meadow. SEMA PUCIUBUE ecw a chad asia Oisin.s ax oe teh Queen of the Prairie. Symphytum officinale var. ...ssecsceeees Variegated Comfrey. LAC UNE WARUE. 650.5 seers o Sesles 2 wih aeibre Maiden-hair Meadow Rue. Tritoma uvaria, (and vars.)...........6- Red-hot Poker, needs covering in winter with litter. Rermicd SAPUTAGE .2.42 since ads aedinie =e Rock Tunica. DRECH FUAMENTORE < Siaiidt son cheeiale was we 086 Bear-Grass. PERENNIAL ORNAMENTAL GRASSES, DS ARUN DAE a wiatels oo 5? sielaial soe aie Great Reed. 2. sa Pale MORSIEGO rae, Sac iaains!, Zisie Variegated Reed. 3. GO SOOISIIOUIL. =, = clonic ie otal. otal siya sua & Silvery < 4. HTIGNthus HAVenn®@, 602 od iccececincsoss Ravenna grass. 5. Mulalia SApPOnicd VARs 600000200 cece nese Japan Eulalia. GO. Pestwent -QUAUce,. «..\ scicesis +040 dda eee ae Blue Fescue. 1s GUMerdit QVGCHOUIT Fis esa sts tne = Pampas grass. 8. PansennenirpeQin. O62 5. oes nels dss Wand-like Panic. 9. Phalaris arundinacea picta........+..+- Ribbon grass. SON SE ERIM S . os b ccc cortly Luce ae alee Feather grass. In the climate of New York, Nos. 1, 2 and 7 need protection ; Nos. 1 and 2 by litter over the roots, and No. 7 by covering it with a cask or box. In the order of their hight, No. 6 is 6 inches, 9 and 10 a foot, 5 and 8, 3 to 4 feet, and 1, 2, 3, 4, and 7 from 6 to 12 feet, according to the age of the plants. 112 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. CHAPTER XXXV. ANNUAL FLOWERING PLANTS. To make a selection from the bewildering number of varieties now offered in our seed catalogues, is an inter- esting, though it may be sometimes rather a perplexing operation. It is not very easy to give specific advice in the matter, as tastes are so varied. We would say, in general terms though, be shy of ‘‘novelties” until you see them recommended in the lists the second year ; you may then know that their merits have been tested and they are given permanent place. We haye been import- ers of all such ‘ novelties” for over twenty years, and think ourselves lucky if we get one good thing for every nineteen worthless ones we try. Still, to get the good things, all that are offered must be tried, and. subjected to the sifting process—separating the chaff from the wheat. We can only use space to enumerate a few gen- erally favorite kinds, which we give in the list below; this comprises such as are of easiest cultivation, and are most valued for the beauty or fragrance of their flowers. Asters, Escholtzia, Nasturtiums, Balsams, Geraniums, Nemophila, Candytufts, Globe Amaranths, Pansy, Cannas, Helichrysums, Petunia, *Canary Bird Flower, Ice Plant, Phlox Drummondii, Carnations, *Ipomea, Poppy, Clarkias, ~ Lobelia, Portulaca, Cockscombs, Lupines, Scabiosa, Collinsia, Lychnis, Schizanthus, *Convolvulus, Marigolds, *Sweet Peas, *Cypress Vine, Mignonnette, Stocks, Delphiniums,(Larkspur) Mimosa,(Sensitive-plant) Zinnias, Dianthus, Those Marked * are climbers. I have used the popular and scientific names indis- criminately in the way they are given in most seed cata- ANNUAL FLOWERING PLANTS. 113 logues, as this will facilitate reference to them for descriptions. ‘The rule for the sowing of seeds already given in the chapter ‘‘ Propagation of Plants by Seeds,” applies to sowing the seeds of annuals whether in the hot- bed or greenhouse, to obtain plants to set in the open border, or sowing at once in the open border. The cov- ering of the seeds should in every case be of a light ma- terial. Thus, if the soil of your flower-garden is hard and rough, be sure that the surface on which the delicate seeds are to be sown is made smooth and level, and that it is covered with a fine light soil, such as leaf-mold, in the manner described in the chapter referred to. Proba- bly three-fourths of all the flower-seeds that are sown by amateurs never germinate, and for no other reason than that they have not been properly treated. One sows a tropical seed, such-as Portulaca, in March, and wonders that it does not start to grow; by May, the time it should be sown in the ground, the spot has become covered with weeds, and the tiny plant, if it comes now at all, is choked and killed. Another reverses the order and wonders that the hardy Pansy seeds which are sown in June, fail to grow, or if they grow, fail to bloom in the dog days. Our seed catalogues are nearly all defective in not giving more specific directions for the culture of an- nual plants ; if the space used for description of form and color was devoted to telling the time and manner of sow- ing, it would be of far more benefit to the amateur buyer, but nearly all follow the English practice of giving de- scriptions of varietiesonly. There the necessity for such information is less, the people being better informed as to flower culture, and the climate is also more congenial for germination of most seeds. 114 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. CHAPTER XXXVL FLOWERS WHICH WILL GROW IN THE SHADE. There are few plants that will flower in places from which sunshine is entirely exciuded. Some plants will grow well enough, developing shoots and leaves, but jlowers of nearly all kinds must have some sunshine. Of those that do well and flower when planted out in the open ground where sunlight only comes for two or three hours during the day, may be named the following: Calceolarias, Fuchsias, Lobelias, Herbaceous Phloxes, Pansies, Forget-me-nots, Lily of the Valley, and other herbaceous plants and shrubs whose native habitat is shady woods. Perhaps a better effect is produced in such situations by ornamental leaved plants, such as Co- leuses of all kinds, Amaranths, Achyranthes, Caladi- ums, Cannas, and other plants with high colored or orna- ~ mental leaves. With these may be combined the differ- ent styles of white or gray-leaved plants, such as Centau- reas, Cincrarias, Gnaphaliums—plants known under the general popular term of ‘‘ Dusty Millers.” For our own part we much prefer to devote shaded situations to such plants, rather than to see the abortive attempts to produce fiowers made by plants in positions where there is no sun- shine. It may be here remarked that the cultivator of plants in rooms should understand the necessity of sun- light to plants that are to flower, and endeavor to get them as near as possible to a window having an eastern or a southern aspect. The higher the temperature, the more plants suffer for the want of light. Many plants, such as Geraniums, Fuchsias, or Roses, might remain in a temperature of 40 degrees, in a cellar for example, away from direct light for months without material injury, _ while if the cellar contained a furnace keeping up a tem- INSECTS. 115 _ perature of 70 degrees, they would all die before the win- ter was ended, particularly if the plants were of a half hardy nature. Ii tropical species, they mignt stand it better, but all plants quickly become enfeebled when kept at high temperature and away from the light. CHAPTER XXXVII. INSECTS. When insects attack plants in the greenhouse, parlor, or anywhere under cover, .we can generally manage to get them under control, but when they attack plants in the open air, it is according to our experience, difficult to destroy them. Insects are injurious to plants in the open air in two principal ways : some attack the branches and leaves, and others infest the roots. When insects attack the roots of a plant, we have been able to do but little to stop their ravages. We can manage somewhat better with those attacking the leaves, but even this di- vision of the enemy is often too much forus. As a pre- ventive, we would strongly advise that birds of all kinds should be encouraged. Since the European sparrows have favored us with their presence in such numbers, in- sects of nearly all kinds have much decreased. Most people will remember the disgusting ‘‘ measuring worm ” that festooned the shade-trees in New York, Brooklyn, and other cities ten years ago; these made their exit al- ' most in proportion to the increase of sparrows, and now hardly one is to be seen. The same is true of the Rose slug. In my rose grounds, a few years ago, we were obliged to employ a number of boys for weeks during the summer to shake off and kill the Rose slug in order to 116 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. keep the plants alive, but since we have had the sparrows in such numbers, hardly one of these pests is now seen. An examination of the crop of a sparrow killed in July, showed that it contained Rose slugs, Aphis, or green-fly, and the seeds of chickweed and other plants, proving beyond question the fact that they are promiscuous feed- ers. The Rose slug, (Selandria rose), referred to above, is a light green, soft insect, varying from *|,, of an inch to nearly an inch in length. There are apparently two species or varieties, one of which eats only the cuticle of the lower side of the leaf, the other eats it entire. The first is by far the most destructive here. In a few days after the plants are attacked they appear as if they had been burned. An excellent application for the prevention of the ravages of the Rose slug is whale-oil soap dissolved in the proportion of one lb. to eight gallons of water, this, if steadily applied daily for a week with a syringe on Rose plants, before the leaf has developed in spring, will en- tirely prevent the attacks of the insect. But we find that if the slug once gets fairly at work, this remedy is powerless unless used so strong as to injure the leaves. The Rose-Bug, (Macrodactylus subspinosus), or Rose Chaffer, gets its name from the preference it shows for the buds and blossoms of the Rose, though it is equally destructive to the Dahlia, Aster, Balsam, and many other flowers, and especially grape blossoms. All the or- dinary remedies seem to fail with the Rose-bug, and it can only be stopped by picking it off by hand. Green-Fly, or Aphis, is one of the most common, but fortunately most easily destroyed, of any insect that in- fests plants, either in-doors or out. In our greenhouses, as already stated, we fumigate twice a week, by burning about half a pound of refuse tobacco stems, (made damp), to every 500 square feet of glass surface, but in private greenhouses or on plants in rooms, fumigating is often impracticable. Then the tobacco stems can be INSECTS. 117 used by steeping one pound in five gallons of water, un- til the water gets to be the color of strong tea, This liquid applied over and under the leaves with a syringe, will destroy the insect quite as well as by fumigating, only in either case the application should be made before the insects are seen, to prevent their coming rather than to destroy them when established ; for often by neglect they get a foothold in such legions that all remedies be- come ineffectual to dislodge them. Another means of preventing the green-fly is to apply tobacco in the shape of dust. ‘The sweepings of tobacco warehouses, which can be found for sale in most seed or agricultural establishments, at a cost of five to ten cents per pound. This applied once or twice a week to an ordinary sized private greenhouse, would effectually prevent any injury from green-fly. No special quantity of this need be prescribed, all that is necessary is to see that it is so dusted on that it reaches all parts of the plant and on both sides of the leaves. It is best to slightly syringe the plants beforehand, so that the dust will adhere to the leaves. When applied to plants out-doors, it should be done in the morning when the dew is on. Fruit-trees of many kinds, shrubs, and Roses of all kinds, out of doors, are particularly liable tc injury from some species of Aphis, but the application of tobacco dust, if made in time, will be found a cheap and effectual remedy. Ground or Blue Aphis, is a close relative of the pre- ceeding, but it gets its living from the roots down in the soil, while the Green Aphis feeds in the air on the leaves. The Blue Aphis attacks a great many varieties of plants, particularly in hot, dry weather, and whenever Asters, Verbenas, Petunias, Centaureas, or such plants begin to droop, it will be found on examination, in three cases out of four, that the farthest extremities of their roots are completely surrounded by the Blue Aphis. The only remedy we have ever found for this pest is a strong de- 118 GARDENING FOR FLEASURE. coction of tobacco, made so strong as to resemble strong coffee in color. The earth around the plants must be soaked with this so that the lowest roots will be reached. The tobacco water will not hurt the plants, but will be fatal to the insect, and if it has not already damaged the roots to too great an extent, may prove a remedy. Ants.—These are not usually troublesome unless in great numbers, yet when they appear in strong force they are often very destructive. About the simplest method we have found to get rid of them, is to lay fresh bones around the infested plants ; they will leave everything to feed on these, and when thus ee may be easily destroyed. The Red Spider is one of the most insidious enemies of plants, both when under glass and in the open air in summer. It luxuriates in a hot and dry atmosphere, and the only remedy that I can safely recommend to am- ateurs, 1s copious syringings with water, 1f in the green- house, so that a moist atmosphere can be obtained. This, of course, is not practicable when plants are grown in rooms, and the only thing that can then be done is to sponge off the leaves. It is this insect, more than any thing else, that makes it so difficult to grow plants in the dry air of the sitting-room, as it may be sapping the life blood from a plant, and its owner never discover the cause of his trouble. It is so minute as hardly to be seen by the naked eye, but its ravages soon show, and if the leaves of your plants begin to get brown, an exami- nation of the under-surface of the leaf will usually reveal the little pests in great numbers. When they get thus established there is no remedy but to sponge the leaves thoroughly with water, or weak soapsuds. The Mealy Bug, as it is generally called, is a white mealy or downy-looking insect, which is often very trou- blesome among hot-house plants, but rarely does any harm amongst those that can live in a cool room, as no INSECTS. 119 doubt it is a native of some tropical country, and can only exist in such a temperature as is required by plants of that kind. ‘There are various remedies used by florists, but the use of nearly all of them might do more harm than good in inexperienced hands, and I therefore advise that they should only be destroyed by being washed off such plants as Gardenias, or rubbed off of more tender _Jeaved plants with a soft brush ; or where there are but few, they may be readily picked off by the use of a quill sharpened like a toothpick. Brown and White Scale Insects.—These appear lite- less, and adhere closely to the stems of such plants as Oleanders, Ivies, etc., and like the Mealy Bug are best destroyed by being washed or rubbed off. Thrips.—This is an insect varying in color from light yellow to dark brown, and much more active in its move- ments than the Green-Fly, and more difficult to destroy ; when it once gets a foothold it is very destructive. It succumbs to tobacco, in any of the forms recommended for the destruction of Green-Ily, but not so readily. It luxuriates In shaded situations, and generally abounds where plants are standing too thickly together, or where ventilation or light is deficient. It may be safely as- serted that in any well regulated place where plants are kept, no injury from insects will ever become serious if due attention has been given to keeping the atmos- phere of the place moist, and using tobacco freely in any of the forms we have recommended. The Angle Worm.—This is the common werm seen in every soil in pots and in the open ground. It is harmless so far as feeding goes, for it seems never to touch plants as food, but it bores and crawls around in a way by no means beneficial to pot-grown plants; it is, however, easily dislodged ; by slaking a quart of lime ” us and adding water to make up ten gallons of the liquid, and watering the plants with it after it has become 120 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. clear, the caustic qualities of the lime will be quickly fatal to the worm. CHAPTER XXXVIITI. MILDEW. Mildew is a parasitical fungus, often seen on greenhouse and other plants, and is quickly destructive to their health. But as with all other plant troubles, it is best to prevent rather than cure. Care should be taken, particularly where roses or grape vines are grown under glass, as both of these are especially liable to be attacked, to avoid a rapid change of temperature, or a long exposure to sud- den chill by draughts in ventilating. As soon as spots of grayish-white appear on the leaves of roses or grape- _vines, either out-doors or under glass, it is certain that ~ mildew is present, but if it has not been neglected too long, the following preparation will usually be found a prompt remedy. Take three pounds each of flowers of sul- phur and quick-lime, put together and slake the lime, and add six gallons of water ; boil all together until it is re- duced to two gallons, allow the liquid to settle until it gets clear, then bottle for use. One gill only of thisis — to be mixed in five gallons of water, and syringed over the plants in the evening, taking care not to use it on the fruit when ripe, as it would communicate a taste and smell which would render it useless. Applied in this weak state, it does not injure the leaves, and yet has the power to destroy the low form of vegetable growth, which we call mildew. We apply it just as we do tobacco, once — or twice a week, as a preventive, and we rarely havea — speck of mildew. Se, a ae FROZEN PLANTS, 121 CHAPTER XXXIX. FROZEN PLANTS. When by any mishap the plants, whether in parlor or greenhouse, become frozen, either at once remove them, (taking care not to touch the leaves), tosome piace warm enough to be just above the point of freezing ; if there are too many to do that, get up the fire as rapidly as possible and raise the temperature. The usual advice is to sprinkle the leaves and shade the plants from the sun. We have never found either remedy of any avail with frozen plants, and the sprinkling is often a serious in- jury if done before the temperature is above the freezing point. In our experience with thousands of frozen plants, we have tried all manner of expedients, and found no better method than to get them out of the freezing at- mosphere as quickly as possible, and we have also found that the damage is in proportion to the succulent condi- tion of the plant, and the intensity of the freezing. Just what degree of cold plants in any given condition can en- dure without injury, we are unable to state. Plants are often frozen so that the leaves hang down, but when thawed out are found to be not atall injured ; at another time the same low temperature acting on the same kind of plants may kill them outright if they happen to be growing more thriftily, and are full of sap. When the frost is penetrating into a greenhouse or room in which plants are kept, and the heating arrangements are inade- © quate to keep it out, the best thing to do is to cover the | plants with paper, (newspapers), or sheeting ;_ thus pro- tected, most plants will be enabled to resist four or five degrees of frost ; paper is rather better than sheeting for _ this purpose. 6 122 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE, CHAPTER XL. MULCHING. Litter of any kind placed around newly planted trees to prevent evaporation from the soil, was the original meaning of mulch, but it is at present extended to in- clude a covering of the soil applied at any time, and for very different purposes. Good cultivators apply hay, straw, or other litter to the surface of the soil to protect the roots of certain plants against the action of frost, it being useful, not so much against freezing as to prevent the alternate freezing and thawing, that is apt to occur in our variable and uncertain climate, even in mid-win- ter. As mentioned under strawberry culture, the mulch applied in the fall protects the roots during winter, it is allowed to remain on the bed where, if thick enough, it keeps down weeds, and prevents the evaporation of mois- ture from the soil during the dry time we are apt to have between the flowering and the ripening of the strawberry. Besides all this, it makes a clean bed for the fruit to rest upon, and should a driving shower come up as the fruit is ripening, there is no danger that the berries will be splashed with mud and spoiled. The utility of a mulch is not confined to the strawberry among fruits ; raspber- ries and currants are much benefitted by it, and by its use a gardener of my acquaintance succeeds in growing fine crops of the fine varieties of English gooseberries, a fruit with which very few succeed in our hot summers. Newly planted trees, whether of fruit or ornamental kinds, are much benefitted by a mulch, and its applica- - tion often settles the question of success or failure. We have known a whole pear orchard to be mulched, and the owner thonght its cost was more than repaid by saving MULCHING. 123 the fallen fruit from bruises. The rooting of a layer is by some gardeners thought to be facilitated by placing a flat stone over the buried branch; the fact being that the stone acts as a mulch, and prevents the soil around the cut portion from drying out, and greatly favors the rooting process. Even in the vegetable garden, mulch- ing is found useful, especially with cauliflowers, which find our summers quite too dry. The material of the mulch is not of much importance, the effect being purely mechanical, one kind of litter will answer as well as an- other ; the material will be governed in great measure by locality ; those living near salt water will find salt-hay, as hay from the marshes is called, the most readily pro- cured ; those who live near pine forests use the fallen leaves, or pine needles as they are called; in the grain growing districts straw is abundant, and nothing can be better ; it can be applied more thoroughly if run through a cutter, though the thrashing machine often makes it short enough. Leaves are nature’s own mulch, and an- swer admirably ; if there is danger of their being blown away, brush laid over them, or even a little earth sprink- led on them will keep them in place. Tan-bark and saw- dust may serve for some uses, but they are very bad for strawberries, their finer particles being about as objec- tionable as the soil. One of the best materials to use for summer mulching is the green grass mowed from lawns. This applied to the thickness of two or three inches around the roots of all kinds of small fruits, will be found not only to greatly benefit the crop, particularly in dry weather, but will save greatly in labor by preventing the growth of weeds. One of our best private gardeners in the vicinity of New York has adopted this summer mulching with the grass from the lawn for nearly twenty years, and has succeeded in growing all kinds of small fruits in the highest degree of perfection. 124 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE, CHAPTER XLI. ARE PLANTS IN ROOMS INJURIOUS TO HEALTH? The question whether plants may be safely grown in living rooms is now settled by scientific men, who show that whatever deleterious gases may be given out by plants at night they are so minute in quantity that no injury is ever done by their presence in the rooms and by being inhaled. ‘Though we were glad to see the question disposed of by such authority, ex- perience had already shown that no bad effects ever resulted from living in apartments where plants were grown. Our greenhouses are one mass of foliage, and I much doubt if any healthier class of men can be found than those engaged in the care of plants. But timid per- sons may say that the deleterious gases are given out only at night, while our greenhouse operatives are only em- ployed in daylight. This is only true in part. Our watchmen and men engaged in attending to fires at night make the warm greenhouses their sitting-room and their sleeping-room, and I have yet to hear of the first instance where the slightest injury resulted from this practice. Many of our medical practitioners run in old ruts. Some Solomon among them probably gave out this dogma a century ago, it was made the convenient scape- goat of some other cause of sickness, and the rank and file have followed in his train. A belief in this error ‘often consigns to the cellar, or to the cold winds of win- ter, the treasured floral pets of a household. SHADING. 125 CHAPTER XLII. SHADING. In mulching the object is to prevent evaporation from the soil, as well as to shield the roots from sudden changes of temperature ; it is often necessary to protect the whole plant in this respect, and this is accomplished by shading. Although on a large scale, we can do little in the way of shading plants in the open ground, yet the amateur will often find it of great utility, as screening will frequently save a recently transplanted plant, which without it would be quite ruined by a few hours’ exposure to the sun. For shading small plantsin the border, such as transplanted annuals, a few shingles will be found very useful, one or two of these can be stuck in the ground so as to completely protect the delicate plant and yet not deprive it of air. Six-inch boards of half-inch stuff nailed together to form a V shaped trough are very use- ful in the garden; they are handy to place over small plants during cold nights, and may be turned over and set to make a screen against strong winds, or used for shading plants in rows. Seedlings often suffer from the heat of the sun in the middle of the day; the seedlings of even the hardiest forest trees are very delicate when young. ‘The seeds of such trees when sown naturally al- most always fall where the young plant will be shaded, and the amateur who experiments in this very interesting branch of horticulture, the raising of evergreen and de- ciduous trees and shrubs from seed, will find it necessary to imitate nature and protect his young seedlings from the intense heat of the sun. There are several ways of doing this ; if the seeds have been sown in an open bor- der, let him take twigs about a foot long, evergreen if 126 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. © they can be had, but if not, those from any deciduous tree, and stick them a few inches apart all over the bed. This will give the seedlings very much such a protection as they would naturally have had in the shade of other plants, and though evergreens will look better for a while, the dead leaves of deciduous twigs will give quite as use- fula shade. It is always safer to sow seeds in a frame, asthe young plants are then under more complete con- trol. Frames are easily shaded by means of a lattice made of common laths. Strips of inch stuff an inch and a half or two inches wide, are used for the sides of the lattice, and laths are nailed across as far apart as their own width. One lath being nailed on, another is laid down to mark the distance, the third one put down and nailed, and the second lath is moved along to mark the distance for the fourth, and so on. With ascreen of this kind there is abundant light, but the sun does not shine long at a time on one spot, and the plants have a con- stantly changing sun and shade. This lath screen may be used for shading plants in the open ground if sup- ported at a proper hight above them. In a propagating house, where it is necessary, as it often is, to shade cut- tings, a lattice laid upon the outside of the glass answers a good purpose. The laths are sometimes tied together with strong twine, the cord answering the place of slats, and serving as a warp with which the laths are woven ; the advantage of a screen of this kind is that it can. be rolled up. Plants kept In windows during the summer months will, if in a sunny exposure, require some kind of a shade, and if the one provided to keep the sun from the room shuts out too much light, or excludes air as well as sun, something must be provided which will give protection during the heat of the day, and still allow sufficient light and an abundant circulation of air. Any one with ingenuity can arrange a screen of white cotton cloth to answer the purpose. SHADING. 127 -* The old practice of stripping the greenhouse in sum- mer is falling into disuse, and by a proper selection of plants and sufficient shade, it is made as attractive then as at any other season, but even for tropical plants the glass must be shaded. For a small lean-to, a screen of light canvass or muslin arranged upon the outside, so that it may be wound up on a roller when not wanted will answer, and if it be desired to keep the house as cool as possible, this should be so contrived that there will be a space of six inches or so between that and the glass. But upon a large house, or one with a curvilinear roof, this is not so manageable, and the usual method is to coat the glass with some material which will obstruct a part of the hight. The most common method is to give the outside of the glass a coat of ordinary lime whitewash ; this makes a sufficient shade, and is gradually dissolved by the rains, so that by autumn the coating is removed, or so nearly so that what remains may be readily washed off. A more pleasant effect is produced by spattering the glass with the same wash, which can be done by a dex- terous use of the brush and flirting it so as to leave the wash in numerous fine drops, like rain-drops. Others use whiting and milk for the same purpose. Whatever may be the means of effecting it, we find that in this lat- itude shading of some kind is required from about the 1st of May to the middle of September by nearly all plants grown under glass. Ferns, Lycopods, Caladiums, Primu- las, Fuchsias, Begonias, Gloxinias, Achimenes, Lobelias, Smilax, and plants of that character require the glass to be heavily shaded, while for Roses, Carnations, Bouvardias, Poinsettias, Geraniums of all kinds, and nearly all suc- culent plants, do not need so much. The method of spattering the glass outside with thin whitewash, allows the shading to be light or heavy, as required. When first done, it is spattered very thinly, merely to break the strong glare of the sun, just about thick enough to half 128 _ GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. cover the surface. As the season advances, the spatter- ing should be repeated to increase the shade, but at no time for the plants last mentioned do we entirely cover the glass. In England, especially for fern houses, Brunswick green mixed with milk is used, to give a | green shade, which is thought to be best suited to these plants. The blue glass for greenhouses which was so highly landed a few years ago, has not met with much favor, but recent experiments in glazing with ground glass have given such results as to warrant amore careful investigation into the use of this material. CHAPTER XLITL THE LAW OF COLOR IN FLOWERS. I refer to this matter in the hope that it may be the means of saving some of my readers, not only from being duped and swindled, by a class of itinerant scamps that. annually reap a rich harvest in disposing of impossibili- ties in flowers, but that I may assure them of the utter improbability of their ever seeing such wonders as these fellows offer, thereby saving them from parting with money for worthless objects, and from the ridicule of their friends who are already better advised. This sub- ject cannot be too often brought before our amateur hor- ticulturists. Warnings are given year after year in lead- ing agricultural and other journals devoted to gardening, yet a new crop of dupes is always coming up who readily fall victims to the scoundrels who live upon their credu- lity. Nota season passes but some of these swindling dealers have the audacity to plant themselves right in THE LAW OF COLOR IN FLOWERS. 129 the business centers of our large cities, and hundreds of our sharp business men glide smoothly into their nets. The very men who will chuckle at the misfortunes of a poor rustic when he falls into the hands of a mock auctioneer, or a pocket-book dropper, will freely pay $10 for a rose plant of which a picture has been shown them as having a blue flower ; the chance of its coming blue being about equal to the chance that the watch of the mock auctioneer will be gold. It has long been known among the best observers of such matters, that in certain families of plants, particular colors prevail, and that in no single instance can we ever expect to see blue, yellow, and scarlet colors in varieties of the same species. If any one at all conversant with plants will bring any family of them to mind, it will at once be seen how undeviating is this law. In the Dahlia we have scarlet and yellow, but no approach to blue, so in the Rose, Hollyhock, ete. Again in the Verbena, Salvia, etc., we have scarlet and blue, but no yellow! If we reflect it will be seen that there is nothing out of the order of nature in this arrange- ment. We never expect to see among our poultry with their varied but somber plumage, any assume the azure hues of our spring Blue-bird, or the dazzling tints of the Oriole ; why then should we expect nature to step out of what seems her fixed laws, and give usa blue Rose, a blue Dahlia, or a yellow Verbena ? PEL FEU UT 2G A BER: 7 PRUNING. Lae CHAPTER XLIV. PRUNING. Though the chapter on pruning is placed at the com- mencement of that division of the work which treats upon fruits, the fact must not be lost sight of that prun- ing is often quite as necessary upon trees and shrubs cul- tivated for their flowers or foliage as upon those grown for their fruit. In pruning we cut away some portion of a tree, shrub, or other plant, for the benefit of that which remains, and whether performed upon a branch six inches through, or upon a shoot so tender as to be cut by the thumb-nail, is essentially the same. The operation, though very simple, is one which the amateur often fears to undertake, and having no confidence in his own ability, he often employs some jobbing gar- dener, who has no fears on this or any other gar- dening matter. Pruning is done for various ends, and unless one has a definite reason for doing it, he had better leave it undone : Many have an idea that pruning must, for some reason, be done every year, just as it used to be thought necessary for people to be bled every spring, whether well or ill. We prune to control the shape of a tree or shrub, and by directing the growth from one part _to another, obtain a symmetrical form, especially in fruit trees, where it is desirable that the weight of fruit be equally distributed. In some trees where the fruit is grown only on the wood of the previous season, the bear- ing portions ate each year removed further and further from the body of the tree ; in such cases a shortening of the growth each year will cause the formation of a com- . pact head instead of the loose straggling that results when this is omitted. We prune to renew the vigor of a plant ; the inexperienced cannot understand how cutting 134 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE, away a third, a half, or even more of a plant can improve it in vigor and fruitfulmess, or abundance and size of flowers. Let us suppose that a stem which grew last year has 20 buds upon it; if this is allowed to take its own course in the spring, a few of the upper buds will push with great vigor, and form strong shoots; those below will make gradually weaker shoots, and for probably the lower third of the stem the buds will not start at all; the most vigorous growth is always at the top, the buds there were the last formed in the previous summer, are the most excitable, and the soonest to grow the next spring, and getting the start of those below them, they draw the nourishment to themselves and starve the others. If, instead of allowing this stem to grow at will in this man- ner, it had been, before any of the buds started, cut back to leave only a few of the lower ones, those hay- ing an abundance of nutriment would push forth with great vigor and be nearly equal in size, while the flowers or fruit borne upon them would be greatly superior to those upon the unpruned stem. Any one can readily be con- vinced of the utility of pruning by taking two rose-bushes of equal size, leaving one without any pruning to take care of itself, and each spring cutting the other back se- verely, pruning away one-third or one-half of the wood that was formed the previous season. The result at the end of two years will be very striking. No general rule can be given for pruning; the amateur should use his eyes, and notice the habit of growth of his trees and shrubs. He will find that many, like the rose, produce their flowers upon the new wood of the present season, and that such plants are greatly benefitted by cutting back more or less each spring. But there are other plants for which this treatment will not answer; if we examine a horse-chestnut-tree, or a lilac-bush, and many others, we shall find that the flowers come from the large buds that were formed on the end of last season’s growth, PRUNING. 135 and that to cut back such plants would be to remove all the flower-buds. With shrubs of this kind, all that need be done is to thin out the branches where they are too crowded. ‘These examples will warn the novice against indiscriminate pruning, and unless as he stands before his shrub or tree, knife in hand, he knows why he is to prune and how, let him put his knife in his pocket, and give the plant the benefit of the doubt. While under the different fruits we can give directions for the partic- ular pruning required by each, the proper method of treating a miscellaneous collection of ornamental shrubs and trees can only be learned by observation. The term pruning is generally applied to the cutting away, in whole or in part, of the ripened wood, but much pruning may be done by the use of the thumb and finger; this is termed pinching, and is practiced upon young shoots while they are yet soft. This most useful form of prun- ing allows us to control the form of a plant with the greatest ease, and is applied not only to soft-wooded plants, but to trees and shrubs, and may be so performed on these as to render nearly, if not quite, all pruning of ripened wood unnecessary. If a vigorous shoot has its end or ‘“‘ growing point” pinched out it will cease to elongate, but will throw out branches below, the growth of which may be controlled in the same manner; the blackberry illustrates the utility of this kind of pruning ; the rampant growing shoot which springs up from the root will, if left to itself, make a long cane six or eight feet high, and with a very few branches near the top ; if when this shoot has reached four, or at most five feet, its end be pinched off, it will then throw out numerous branches, and if the upper branches, when they reach the length of 18 inches, be ‘‘ stopped,” (as it is called), in a similar manner, by pinching, the growth will be directed to the lower ones, and by the end of the season instead of a long, unmanageable wand, there will be a well- 136 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. branched bush which will bear its fruit all within reach. The grower of plants in pots is usually afraid to remove even a single inch of the stem, and the result is usually alot of ‘‘leggy” specimens not worth the care that is otherwise bestowed uponthem. Plants may be prevented from ever reaching this condition, if their growth be properly controlled by pinching ; but if they have once reached it, they should be cut back severely, and a com- pact bushy form obtained from the new shoots which will soon start. The mechanical part of pruning is very sim- ple, a sharp knife is the best implement, as it makes a clean cut, without bruising «, the bark, and the wound quickly heals ; but shears are much easier to handle, and the work can be done so much more quickly, that they are generally preferred, and for rampant growing bushes will answer, but upon fruit- trees, and choice plants gen- erally, the knife is to be pre- ferred. The cut should be : made just ata joint; not so Fig. 48. Fig. 49. Fig. 50. far above it as to leave a WHERE TO CUT IN PRUNING. stub, as in fig. 49, which will die back to the bud, there being nothing to contribute to its growth ; nor should it be made so close to the bud as to endanger it, as in fig. 48 ; the cut should start just opposite the lower part of the bud and end just above its top, as in fig. 50. For the removal of branches too large to cut with the knife, as must sometimes be done on neglected trees, a saw is required. Saws are made especially for the purpose, but any narrow one with the teeth set wide will answer; the rough cut left by the saw should be pared smooth, and if an inch or more in diameter, the wound should be coy- PRUNING. 137 ered; ordinary paint, melted grafting wax, or shellac varnish will answer to protect the bare wood from air and moisture, and prevent decay. In pruning it is well to remember that the future shape of the tree will be materially affected by the position upon the branch of the bud to which the cut is made; the upper bud left on the branch will continue the growth, and the new shoot will be in the direction of that bud. If a young tree is, as in fig. 51, to have all its branches shortened, and each is cut to a bud, A, pointing to- wards the center of the tree, the tendency of the new ' growth will all be inward, as in fig. 52; while if all be cut to an outside bud, B, the result will be to spread the growth, as in fig. 53. As to the time of pruning, about which there * has been much discussion, it may be done on small stems at any time after the fall of the leaf, before the growth starts in the spring, but for the removal of large branches, late in winter is regarded as the best time. Pinching is of course done whenever it is needed. | i: Fig. 51. Fig.52. Fig. 53. PRUNING FOR SHAPE. 138 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. CHAPTER XLV. HARDY GRAPES. Grapes can be grown in almost any soil, provided it is not a wet one, although the grape will take abundance of water when in a growing state, it must pass off quickly, else the growth will be impeded. If the ground is not naturally suitable, (7. e., at least a foot in depth of good soil), a border prepared in the manner recommended in the chapter on ‘‘ Cold Grapery,” will well repay the trouble. It is imperative that the position where the vine is planted be such as will enable it to get sunlight for the greater portion of the day. ‘Ten years ago I planted an arbor with an arched top and 100 feet long by 16 feet wide and 10 feet high, covering a walk running east and west ; this gave a south and north exposure. The crop has always been excellent and abundant on the south side, and top of the arbor, but on the north side, (unless the first and second years of fruiting, when there was not sufficient foliage to impede the light), it has been nearly a failure. There is much misconcep- tion as to what should be the age of a grape-vine when planted ; nine-tenths of our amateur customers ask for vines three or four years old. If a vine of that age could be properly lifted with every root unbroken, then there might be some advantage in its greater strength, but as vines are usually grown in the nurseries closely together, with the roots all interlaced, large plants can rarely be got with roots enough to support the vine and maintain its vigor after transplanting. As a rule it is better to plant one or two-year-old vines, which can usually be bought at half the price of those of three or four years old, and © HARDY GRAPES, 139 which in all probability will give a crop quite as soon, if not sooner, than the large ones. The manner of plant- ing the vine is similar to that of setting any other tree or shrub. The ground must be thoroughly broken up, not in a mere hole only sufficient to hold the roots, but if a regular border has not been made, the place where each vine is to be planted, should not be less than three feet in diameter, and if double that, all the better, and to the depth of not less than a foot. On receiving the vine from the nursery, it may consist of one or more shoots, f; y ff \ y 4 if \ \ \ \ \ y \ | \ f 7 i \ H | } \ | W J S- mn It VE Wout —$—$—$—— NN Se i Fig. 54.—VINE WITH TWO SHOOTS. Fig. 55.—VINE WITH ARMS. | \ : : : Zr 5 x i a i} Sy =< — as SSS YB = 2 a SSS a SE SS SSS SESS but on planting it should be cut back to only two or three eyes or buds. On starting to grow, all of these buds or eyes should be rubbed off except one, selecting the strong- est. Train this shoot perpendicularly to a stake the first year of its growth, the next fall, when the leaves drop, cut it back to nine or ten inches from the ground. When the vine starts the next spring, rub off all eyes or buds except two, which during the season will form two canes, as in fig. 54. These, if they are canes half an inch in 140 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. diameter, are in fall to be pruned to three or four feet long, and the following spring are to be trained hori- zontally, one to the right, the other to the left. If at the end of the second year they are still small, it is better to delay laying down the arms until another year, and grow two upright shoots again, to get them sufficiently strong. These will form the base from which to start the upright shoots, as shown in fig. 99. These upright growths will be the permanent fruiting canes, and should be from 15 to 18 inches apart, and pruned on what is known as the spur system as shown == ——— Fig. 56.—VINE SPUR-PRUNED. by fig. 56. There is nothing arbitrary as to the hight these canes should be. It isa matter of convenience or taste whether they be trained to 3 feet or 15 feet. — Vines thus treated may be allowed to produce a few bunches the third year, and by the sixth year, may be fruited to the hight of 10 or 12 feet of cane if desired. Not more than two bunches of fruit should be allowed to each shoot. We give this manner of training as one of the simplest, although the system of training has but little to do with the crop. The distance apart at which grape-vines may be plant- ed, except the Delaware and afew of the weaker grow- ing sorts, is about eight feet; the Delaware may be set one-third closer. Although grape-vines are hardy in nearly all sections, yet in any locality where the ther- HARDY GRAPES. 141 mometer falls to zero, it is beneficial to lay them down close to the ground and cover them up with rough litter before the approach of severe weather in winter, allowing it to remain on in spring until the buds begin to swell, when the vines are uncovered and tied up to the trellis. If covered in this way they should be pruned before lay- ing down. Pruning may be done at any time from No- vember to March. It isa common belief that grape-vines should be pruned only at certain seasons. The weather must not be too cold, otherwise it is supposed they may be injured if then pruned. Again, they must not be pruned late in the spring, else the sap oozing from the cuts may bleed them to death. Let me say that both these notions are utter nonsense. ‘The pruning of any tree or vine in the coldest weather cannot possibly injure, and the ‘‘bleeding” or running of the sap after any or- dinary pruning, can no more hurt the vine than the blood flowing from a pin scratch would weaken a healthy man. ‘This method of covering up the grape-vine is not commonly practised, but we are satisfied that in exposed positions it is well worth the trouble. I have practised it with vines now ten years old, embracing some 20 vari- eties ; my soil isa stiff clay very unsuitable for the grape, yet these vines have kept clear of mildew, when my neighbor’s vines a few hundred yards off have been seri- ously injured by it. I have long believed that intense cold, long continued, is hurtful to eyen such plants as we call hardy, and the wonderful vigor of these old vines, so treated, seems a good evidence of it. The litter used in covering, (which has become well- rotted by spring), is spread over the border, acting both as asummer mulch and fertilizer. Mildew is the worst enemy to the vine; the same remedy we recommend in this book for mildew on roses, will be found equally effi- cacious for the grape. On the large scale dry sulphur is used, blown upon the vines by a bellows for the purpose. 142 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. Propagation of the grape is done by nurserymen in green- houses, similar to that used for -propagating florists plants. But most of the varieties can be grown with fair success by cuttings in the open air. The cuttings, (made from the young, well ripened shoots of the previous year’s growth), may be made with two (fig. 57) or three buds or eyes, planted in rows, say one foot apart and three inches between the cut- tings, and set so that the top eye or bud only is above ground. The situation where the cuttings are placed should be well exposed to the sun, the soil rich and deep, and of sandy or light character. Care must be taken that the cutting is well firmed in the soil. The cuttings may be made from the prunings at any time during winter, and kept in a damp cellar or buried outside cvrrine. in sand until planted in the cutting-bed in the spring. THE VARIETIES OF THE GRAPE Nove number many hundred, and we will recommend only a very few of the most distinct sorts that have been grown long enough to allow us to be certain of their merits. Concord is perhaps more universally cultivated than any other. It grows most luxuriantly, bearing bunches of large size abundantly; color black, with a rich blue bloom ; the flavor is of average quality. _ Ripens during the month of September. Hartford Prolific.—Resembles the Concord in general appearance, but ripens two or three weeks earlier. It is valuable on this account, but in light soils drops its fruit badly, which is quite a drawback. Tona.—Is a seedling of the old Catawba, color pale red, HARDY GRAPES. 143 flavor excellent, fully equal to the Catawba, but it is pref- erable to that variety in ripening fully a month earlier, or from the 1st to 15th of September. One of the best, where it succeeds ; it requires a strong soil. Delaware.—lts entirely distinct character from any of our hardy grapes, at one time raised the question whether this was not a foreign variety, but that point we believe is now settled, and it is conceded to be a native. In flavor it is unsurpassed, equal to many of our best foreign sorts. Bunches and berries small, of a dark pinkish red color. Rogers’ Hybrids.—These varieties, probably from the unfortunate mistake made by their raiser in designating them by numbers instead of by names, have never, we think, had the popularity they deserve. Some of them are entirely distinct in color and flavor from any other native grapes, and form magnificent bunches. No. 4 (now called Wilder), has berries and bunches of the largest size, black with rich bloom, flavor excellent, ripens September first. No. 15, (Agawam), is a beautiful grape of a bronze color, with pinkish bloom on the side next the sun. It ripens early in September, and we find every season that the grape consumers of our household rarely touch a bunch of any other grape as long as any are left on No. 15. No. 1, (Gcethe), is about the size and color of the white Malaga grape of commerce, tinged with pink on the sunny side, flavor excellent, one of the latest, ripening here in October. No. 19 resembles No. 4, but of an entirely distinct flavor, by some preferred ; ripens 15th of September. 144 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. CHAPTER XLVI. THE COLD GRAPERY. I know of no addition to a country home from which such a large amount of satisfaction can be obtained at so small an outlay as from a grapery for growing the differ- ent varieties of foreign grapes. It has been proved that none of these fine varieties can be cultivated with any sat- isfaction in any part of the northern or even middle states, except under glass. In California and some other states and territories west of the Mississippi the varie- ties of the Huropean grape have been extensively grown in the open air. ‘There the conditions of climate are such as to make their culture a success equal to that at- tained any where in Hurope. Besides the luxury of the grape as a table fruit, no finer sight can be seen, and there is nothing of which an amateur gardener may be more proud than a grapery in which the vines are loaded with ripe fruit. And as this can be obtained at a trifling original outlay, and with but little attention in the culti- vation afterwards, I will briefly describe how to do it. Our climate is particularly well adapted to the cultiva- tion of vines under glass without fire heat, and the won- der is that cold graperies are not in more general use even by people of moderate means than they at pres- ent are. We built one for our own use on the plan shown on page 92; it answering for a greenhouse as well as for a grapery. The dimensions are 50 feet long by 25 wide. It is finished in very good style, and cost but little more than $1,000. It was planted in June, and the third year from planting we cut upwards of 300 lbs. of fruit from it ; the next season it yielded nearly double that quantity. The building was begun by setting locust posts four feet apart; on these was framed the sill, on THE COLD GRAPERY. 145 the front of which were placed upright sashes two and a half feet in hight, and on these the gutter. From the gutter was sprung the bars, ten inches apart each way, running on the east side clear to the ridge pole; on the west framed to within 2 fect of it, so as to give room for lifting sashes. ‘These were two feet wide by six long. To these sashes, eight in number, were attached Hitch- ing’s patent ventilating apparatus, which by turning a crank opens these sashes from one to twenty-four inches, as desired. The front sashes may be made so that every alternate one can open outward. The glass used is known as second quality English or French, 8x10 inches, and put in without the use of any putty on the top of the glass, the manner of glazing being to “‘bed” the pane in soft putty, pressing it down tightly, and then tacking 1 in the glass with ee glazing points about the size shown in fig. 58; we find it an excellent pie in glazing to turn up the edge of these points as in fig. 59, so that / they can catch undertheedge of Fig. 58, the lapping pane to keep it in TIN. BENT TIN. place, otherwise it would slip down, and give a great deal of trouble. Glaziers will not use the points in this way unless compelled to do so, as it takes a somewhat longer time. Glass should never be lapped more than a quarter of an inch, if much more, the water gets between the laps, and when it freezes the glass is cracked. With these instructions about the erection of the glass and wood-work, any intelligent mechanic should be able to build from the plan given. Provision for water should be made by building a cistern inside the grapery, say four ‘ feet deep by eight feet in diameter, or that capacity in an oblong shape would be better. This cistern can be sup- plied by water from the roof, having a waste-pipe for overflow. ‘These general directions for such a structure 7 146 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. as shown in the cut, are equally applicable for almost any size or kind of grapery. Many are built in the form of a ‘‘lean-to,” that is, placed against any building or fence, using such for the back wall of the grapery. This would ~ necessitate only the low front wall, which need not be more than one foot from the ground, if the width is but ten or twelve feet, but a path would require to be sunk inside to give room to stand upright. The sketch, fig. Fig. 60.—LEAN-TO GRAPERY. 60, shows an outline of a ‘‘ lean-to” grapery twenty feet wide, nine feet high at back and two feet in front. Such a structure, (exclusive of the ‘‘border,”) may be put up roughly at a cost not exceeding $4 per running foot, without heating apparatus. Its aspect may be any point from east to south-west. I recollect that some dozen years ago a German jeweler in Jersey City, N. J., grew a splendid crop of Black Ham- burgs on vines which had been planted against the rear fence of his city lot, by placing against the fence some old sashes eight feet long. It was rather a bung- ling sort of an arrangement and awkward to get at, but it served the purpose of ripening the Hamburg grapes, which could not have been done without the glass. When one contemplates the erection of a complete range of gra- THE COLD GRAPERY. 147% peries, the services of a competent garden architect should be engaged. The border of the one we have in use was be- gun by excavating the natural soil to the depth of twenty inches and fifteen feet in width, for the length of the grapery on each side. ‘The inside was left untouched, the borders being entirely outside. The bottom of the excavation was graded from the front of the building to the outside of the borders, with a fall of about an inch to a foot, so that thorough and rapid drainage would be sure to be attained. At the extremity of each border a drain was built to carry off the water. The whole bot- tom was then cemented over so as to prevent the roots from penetrating the subsoil. This pit was then filled to the depth of about two feet, (four inches being allowed for settling), with a compost which was previously pre- pared by mixing about three parts of turf taken from the surface of a rather shaly pasture, one part of rotten stable manure, and one part of lime rubbish. It is one of the popular errors that vines for graperies should be two or three years old; the age of a vine usually has but little to do with its size, and if grape-vines are properly grown the first year from cuttings, they will be quite as good for planting as if two or three years old. In fact it is a question whether a vine grown from a cut- ting in March, and planted in June, is not quite as good as one a year older. Ourexperience has shown that there is hardly a perceptible difference in the two at the end of the season; as such vines, however, are too tender to be shipped far, we generally recommend buying one year old vines that may be planted in April, May, or June, hay- ing ripened shoots about three feet in length. These vines are all grown in pots the previous season, and when received the soil should be shaken off entirely, and the roots spread out in the border without injuring them. The root, it will be understood, is planted owtside in the bor- der, and the shoot taken inside, through an opening in 148 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. the walls. This is made of brick or stone, and should be left open at every three feet, the distance at which the vines should be planted ; if the wall is of wood, it can easily be cut to suit the size of the vine. The plants we used were strong one-year-old vines, and were set about June ist. By October they had grown to over twenty feet in length. The varieties used were nine-tenths Black Hamburg, with a few Muscats and Frontignans, all of which have done exceedingly well. In November they were cut back to the bottom of the rafter, or about three feet from the ground, and quickly reached the top again the second year, with firm, well- ripened wood. In November they were again pruned back to about three feet above the foot of the rafter, or six feet from the ground. On this shoot was produced the fruit referred to, (the third year from the time of planting). We prune any time in November or Decem- ber after the leaves have fallen, and cut the shoot back to about four feet from top of the rafter, or about sixteen feet from the ground. Every December we lay the vines down along the front wall after being pruned, covering them completely with soil until May, when they are then taken up and tied to the wires, which are *|,, galvanized iron, and run across the rafters 15 inches apart and 15 inches from the glass. The training followed is what is called the ‘‘spur” sys- tem, which is simply to allow one cane or shoot to each rafter, (or at three feet apart), and pruning the side shoots or ‘‘ bearing wood” annually back to one eye. In the summer treatment of the cold grapery, the principle must never be lost sight of, that to keep the vines in per- fect health, a temperature of not less than 70° at night, with 10° or 15° higher during the day is always necessary. Any rapid variation downward is certain to result in mil- dew. The floor of the grapery should be kept dashed with water at all times, unless in damp weather, from the THE COLD GRAPERY. 149 time the buds start in May, until the fruit begins to ripen in September, except during the period the vines are in flower, when it should be dispensed with until the fruit is set. Ifthe weather is dry, copious watering is necessary for the border outside. The summer pruning of the grapery consists simply in pinching off the laterals, or side shoots which start from where the leaf joins the stem, to one leaf. very winter three inches of the best well-rotted stable manure is spread over the border, and over that six inches of leaves or lit- ter ; this is raked off in spring, and the manure forked in, the object being to feed the roots from the top of the border. ‘This same treatment we give our hardy grapes with excellent results. I am a good deal of a utilitarian, and am very apt to make even my luxuries ‘‘ pay” when it is practicable to do so; and though we would hardly think of selling our grapes that have been grown for private use, yet I do not scruple to make the glass that shelters them do double duty by using it in winter to shelter our half-hardy roses from November to May. ‘Those that do not make rose- growing a business, as I do, can nevertheless profit by my example, and use the cold grapery for many purposes during the winter months when it is not needed for the grape-vines. Besides roses, all plants of a half-hardy character may be kept there, such as Pomegranates, Crape Myrtles, Pampas Grass, Tritomas, Carnations, etc., care being taken that the pots or tubs in which they are planted are plunged in leaves, tan, or some such sub- stance, so the roots do not freeze. The cold grapery makes an excellent poultry-house in winter, only if put to that use, care must be taken that the buried vines are secure against the scratching of the hens. 150 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. CHAPTER XLVII. THE HOT-HOUSE OR FORCING GRAPERY. When grapes are forced by artificial heat, probably the best plan is that of the ‘‘lean-to” structure shown by the illustrations, figs. 61, 62, and 63. Fig. 61 gives the plan, which, as in some former engravings, it is not prac- ticable to show on the page at full length; it is accord- ingly “fractured” portions, as shown by the irregular lines, being taken out of each compartment ; the figures give the proper proportion. Fig. 62 is a part of the front elevation, and fig. 63, a section at the division between the two houses. The house is 100 feet long by 16 feet wide, divided into two compartments for early and late forcing, each 50x16 feet, and both heated by one boiler with valvesin the furnace pit to shut off and taps to draw the water from the pipes not in use ; a matter to be looked to when vineries are not in use, for if the water is not drawn out of the pipes it may freeze and burst them. When grapes are to be forced, it is essential that.a sufficient covering of manure or leaves be placed on the border to prevent frost from reaching the roots, as to apply heat to the vines inside while the roots are frozen, would seriously in- jure them. For very early forcing, when the vines are started as carly as January, it is usual not only to put covering enough to secure from frost, but also to slightly ferment, so as to throw some warmth into the border. No matter at what season the grapery is started for forcing, the temperature should not run over 50° or 55° at night, with a day temperature of 10° or15° higher, increasing 10° when the buds have opened, which will be in four or five weeks from the time of starting. In five or six weeks the fruit will be set and the temperature is to be raised 10° more. In forcing, moisture is of equal im- 1 THE HOT-HOUSE OR FORCING GRAPERY. 1° iS it ° Wauv : es Ss YO PAAR (abba ais : von ae 08 INOOY T00L yx oe ————— | | va = ANS TT OE ie | ——————es gil OF = Ul scal n0,0S 1O,91% Adad) Wao ONIOYO4; |GNOOSS Fig. 61.—PLAN OF FORCING GRAPERY. 152 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. portance with heat, for if this is not attended to, you may expect red-spiders and thrips, and then all your labor may be in vain ; to keep up this moisture, tanks are usu- — — cin | } i a | | | ec ||| ||| || ( € i ————— ES JS ose ee cies aes ME Fig. 62.—ELEVATION OF FRONT OF FORCING GRAPERY (IN PART). Fig. 63.—sSECTION OF FORCING GRAPERY. ally placed on the hot-water pipes for graperies, and these are kept filled with water, keeping up a continued evap- oration, except at the time the vines are in flower; it THE STRAWBERRY. 153 should be then discontinued until the fruitis set. When there is no such arrangement for evaporation, dash water over the floors and use the syringe. To secure fine berries and bunches, one-third of the berries should be thinned out when of the size of peas, using scissors madé for this purpose. CHAPTER XLVIII. THE STRAWBERRY. Of all small fruits, none perhaps stand so high in general favor as the strawberry. Its culture is simple, and as it grows freely in almost any soil or location, no garden of any pretensions should be without it. If a choice of soil can be had, nothing is so suitable asa deep, rich, but rather sandy loam, though it will yield returns sufficient to warrant its cultivation on any soil, from almost pure sand to clay, providing that it is drained naturally or artificially. In all soils, deep spading or plowing is essential to the production of fine crops ; and this should not be less than a foot, and if 18 inches, all the better. A coat of thoroughly rotted stable manure at least three inches in thickness, should be dug in and well mixed with the soil to a depth of six or nine inches. In the absence of stable manure, any of the concentrated fertilizers mentioned in chapter VI, ‘‘ How to Use Con- centrated Fertilizers,” used in the manner and quantities there described, will do as a substitute. Where muck from the swamps, or leaf-mold from the woods can be obtained, twenty bushels of either of these mixed with one bushel of ashes, will make an excellent fertilizer for strawberries, and may be spread on as thickly as stable manure, and on sandy soils is probably better. 154 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. Strawberries may be planted either in the fall or spring. If the plants are to be set in the fall, it should not be done if possible in this latitude before the middle of Sep- tember. This, of course, refers to the plants from run- ners taken up from. the bed in the usual manner, and there is nothing gained in time over planting the next spring, as the plant must grow for one season before it can bear a full crop of fruit. In private gardens it is WS N SW AN My RAM SQ NA Fig. 64.—STRIKING STRAWBERRIES IN POTS. much better to have the plants layered in pots, as they may then be set at almost any time. These pots may be from two to three inches in diameter; when a lot of strawberry plants are wanted for a new bed, all that is necessary to do is to fill these small pots with soil, and ‘‘plunge ” or plant the pot just to the surface level, plac- ing the unrooted ‘‘runner” of the strawberry plant on the top of the soil in the flower-pot, and laying a small “stone or clod on it to keep it in place. This method of striking in pots is shown in fig, 64. The runners so THE STRAWBERRY. 155 treated will form plants in two or three weeks, and may be planted out with safety any time from August to Oc- tober. If strawberry plants are treated in this way, and planted in August, and care taken that all runners that come from them be cut off as soon as formed, so that the whole force of the root is thrown into the main crown, a full crop of berries will be gathered the season follow- ing, or in nine or ten months from time of planting. We have practiced this system of layering strawberry plants in pots for what we need for our own use, for the past twenty years, and the results have been so successful that we have many converts to the system among our neigh- bors. Plants grown in this manner cannot often be ob- tained from the nurseries, as the necessary labor and ex- pense of the pots makes the price five times more than that of ordinary plants rooted in the open bed. When strawberry plants are set out in the fall, unless under favorable circumstances, many will fail to grow, for the reason that each young plant or runner is sustained in part by the old plant, and when detached, feels the shock more than a rooted cutting or seedling plant does, that has been growing for weeks on its own account, for that reason we have always advised all that were intending to plant fresh strawberry beds, to prepare their plants a few weeks ahead by layering them in pots. Two tofour hun- dred plants are all that an ordinary family will need, and two or three hours’ work would be all the time required to layer the plants in the pots. One hundred plants so prepared, will give more fruit the first season than 1,000 plants planted in the usual way, and the plant forms a stool quicker, and much less time is expended in keep-. ing them clean. The use of layered plants is recom- mended specially for fall planting, and the sooner it is done in fall the better; plant in August if possible. : In spring the use of potted plants would have no spe- cial advantage, as if planted in April or May, they would 156 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. have all the summer to grow, but of course no fruit can be expected the season of planting. For this reason, it will be seen that to secure a crop quickly, the time to plant is in August or September, and from plants that have been layered in pots. ‘There is no arbitrary rule for the distance apart at which strawberry plants should be set, but if the ground has been prepared as advised, the finest fruit will be had by giving them plenty of room, For our own use we usually set 400 plants annu- . ally in August, at two feet apart between the rows, and eighteen inches between the plants, and gather about 200 quarts of splendid fruit. If the ground is limited they may be planted at half the above distance, particularly if set late in fall. ‘There is one very important point in strawberry culture that should never be neglected ; that is, that the beds be entirely covered with hay, straw, or leaves, to the depth of three or four inches. This coy- - ering should not be put on, however, before the approach of severe weather, in this district about the middle of De- cember. ‘This covering should not be taken off in spring ; it is only necessary to go over the beds as soon as growth begins in spring, and pull the covering back from the plants only sufficient to expose the crown, allowing all to remain on the bed. ‘This covering serves several purpo- ses. It keeps the roots warm until the plants start to grow, it keeps the fruit clean when ripe, it prevents the _ growth of weeds, and finally acts as a mulch to keep the soil from drying in hot weather. Although strawberry beds will remain in bearing for a number of years, the fruit is always largest and finest the first season of bear- - ing, gradually getting smaller as the plants get older. hence it is desirable to provide for a succession, if not every year, at least every second year. For garden cul- _ ture.in this, as in all other fruits, it is unwise to use any but fully tested varieties, three or four of which are sufficient. THE STRAWBERRY. 152 VARIETIES OF THE STRAWBERRY. Triomphe de Gand is one of the favorite varieties ; it is of large size, fine flavor, and a fair bearer. It requires a heavy soil. Wilson’s Seedling is a variety better known than any other sort ; it bears large crops, but is very sour. It is much used for preserving. Champion.—A berry of an immense size, and beautiful dark crimson appearance, an abundant bearer, but not so rich in flavor as some others. Charles Downing.—This variety is likely to take the place of the Wilson, as it has all the productiveness of that ; succeeds on all soils, and a much better berry. Kentucky.—Is the latest variety, and by planting it with earlier sorts, will extend the season several days. Black Defiance.—This is a first-class fruit in every re- spect, large, productive, and of high flavor; while its dark color unfits it for market, itis one of the best for the private garden. Seth Boyden.—One of the largest berries, very produc- tive, sweet, but not very high flavored; its long neck allows it to be hulled very readily. FORCING STRAWBERRIES. Those who have a greenhouse often wish to force straw- berries into fruit several weeks in advance of the time that they will be ripe in the open air. It may be done in a frame or pit. The young runners must be first layered in pots, as already described, as early as runners are formed, and as soon as the small pots are filled with roots, they must be shifted into larger ones, say six inches in diameter, the runners being pinched off as they appear, so as to throw the whole strength of the plant into the fruiting crown. ‘The soil in which to pot strawberries for 158 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. forcing is the one we recommend-for nearly all plants ; three parts rotted sods, and one part rotted manure. The potted strawberries should be placed on boards, flagging, or a layer of coal ashes, to prevent the earth- worms from getting in at the bottom of the pots. At first, after being shifted, they should be set closely to- gether, but as they grow they must be spread apart, as it is necessary that the air pass around the pots toripen the roots. Of course the necessary attention to water is as important with these as with other plants in pots. They may thus stand in the open air until November, when the pots may be plunged in dry leaves to prevent their be- ing broken by frost ; and the tops also covered an inch or two with the same material; as cold weather advances, they may be taken in at intervals of two weeks or so and placed on the shelves of a greenhouse, near the glass, where the temperature will average at night 50 degrees, and if due attention to watering has been given, a crop will be the result, such as will well repay the labor, not only as fruit, but the plants so loaded will them- selves be beautiful greenhouse ornaments. Good vari- eties for forcing are Triomphe de Gand and Champion. RASPBERRY. To have the Raspberry in perfection, the same prepara- tion of soil is necessary as for the Strawberry. The canes or shoots of the Raspberry are biennial ; that is, the cane or shoot that is formed one season, bears fruit the next season, and dies off after fruiting, giving place to the young cane that is to fruit the following season, and soon. ‘The distances apart to plant the Raspberry for garden culture, may be, if in rows, five feet apart, with the plants two feet apart in the row, or if in separate stools or hills, they may be set four feet each way. If planted at distances of four feet apart, three plants may be put in each ‘‘ hill,” which will quicker secure a crop. RASPBERRY. — 159 They may be set either in fall or in spring ; if in fall, a covering of four or five inches of litter should be spread over the roots to prevent them from getting too much frozen. And even when the plants are established and growing, it is necessary in many cold sections, to bend down the canes and cover them with pine branches or some covering that will shield them from severe freezing. On the large scale the canes are bent down and covered with a few inches of earth, an operation that may be rapidly performed by two persons. One bends down the SSS == = ——S—SSS Fig. 65, LAYING DOWN RASPBERRY CANES. canes, (using a pitchfork or other implement), as shown in the accompanying diagram, (fig. 65), while the other throws sufficient earth near the tips to hold the canes in place; after a row is thus bent over, the two go back and cover with earth more completely. All the pruning that is necessary for the Raspberry is to thin out the shoots in each hill to four or six; this is best done in the summer after the fruit is gathered, and at the same time the old canes that have borne the fruit should be cut out, so that the young shoots, coming forward to do duty next season, may have room to grow freely, and develop and ripen the wood. When the leaves drop in fall, the canes may be shortened down a foot or so, which will complete the pruning process. To get the full benefit of all the fruit, it is very necessary to stake the Raspberry, this may be done either by tying the canes of each plant separately to a stout stake, driven two feet 160 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. or so in the ground, or if grown in rows they may be tied to wires running along the rows ; the wires should be stretched between two stout posts, one at each end of the row, and three feet more or less above the ground, according to variety ; to prevent the wire from sagging, stakes should be driven into the ground directly under it, at intervals of six or ten feet; the wire is attached to these by means of staples placed over it and driven into the ends of the stakes. The di- - agram, fig. 66, “<=> shows the meth- | od of training to the wire ; the longer canes at the right and left are the canes which are to fruit the cur- rent year ; these are tied out as there shown, while the new shoots, which are to furnish canes for the next year’s fruiting, grow up in the center, and as soon as tall enough are tied to the wire ; after the outer canes have fruited, they are cut away to give the others more room. The varieties are very numerous, those named below are such as will be most satisfactory for private use. From 100 to 200 hills or plants, of all varieties, will usu- ally be sufficient for most families. Fastolff.—A large crimson fruit of delicious flavor. Brinckle’s Orange.—An orange colored berry of large size, very productive, and of excellent flavor. Clarke.—Not quite so large as the Fastolff, but of Fig. 66.—TRAINING RASPBERRIES TO A WIRE, BLACKBERRY. 161 strong, robust habit, enduring well the extremes of heat and cold. _ Philadelphia.—One of the hardiest and most produc- tive, growing in soils and situations where the others would fail. It is of rather poor quality, but is useful for the above reasons. Catawissa.—A fall-bearing variety of medium size, color purplish crimson, medium flavor. BLACK CAPS. Black-caps or Black Raspberries have become very popular of late years, many persons being fond of their peculiar flavor. ‘They belong to a distinct species from the ordinary Raspberries; the plants make no suckers, but propagate themselves by taking root at the ends of the. long branches, which in the fall, if allowed to grow at will, bend over and reach the earth. They throw up shoots from the base of the plant which take the place of those which have already borne a crop. In gardens where there is no desire to propagate the plants, the © growing shoots should be pinched off when they get .three or four feet high, and any side-shoots they may throw off are stopped by pinching when they are about 18 inches long. ‘The bearing wood is thinned out after the fruit is off. Mammoth Cluster is considered the most productive of all the numerous varieties. Thornless.—This is preferable to the others in being _ nearly free from spines, and though the fruit is not quite so large, it is much more easily gathered. BLACKBERRY. The cultivation of the Blackberry is nearly similar to that of the Raspberry, except that it should be planted about one-third farther apart, and it being hardier, there is no need for covering it in winter. As it has a more 162 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. vigorous growth, it is sometimes set in any out of the way corner, and in almost any soil; but it will amply repay generous cultivation with finer fruit. The man- ner of growth is the same as the Raspberry, and when the fruit is picked, the old canes are to be cut out to give the new ones a chance. The new shoots are very vigorous growers, and when they reach the hight of five, or at most, six feet, they should be stopped by pinching ; this will cause an abundance of side shoots to start which are to be pinched when about 18 inches long. This treat- ment increases the productiveness of the plants and keeps the frnit within reach. The bushes should be kept tied to stout stakes or wires, as advised for the Raspberry. The following are a few of the popular kinds : Kittatinny.—An immensely large berry of excellent flavor, of deep, shiny black color, one of the very best for family use. Wilson’s Harly.—One of the earliest varieties, ripen- ing a week or more before the Kittatinny, quite as large, . and of excellent quality. Cut-leaved.—The merit of this variety is its lateness of ripening, coming in just when the others are done fruit- ing. It is of large size, and esteemed by many, while others do not like its very distinct and peculiar flavor. CURRANTS. The Currant is useful both for dessert and for preserv- ing purposes. An immense weight of fruit is obtained for the space it occupies, and the ease of its culture makes it common in every garden. The red and white varieties of Currants may be planted three or four feet apart each way, the black at four or five feet apart. Pruning is done in fall by cutting off about one-third of the young growth of the previous summer, and thinning out old shoots when the plant gets too thick. All are trained in GOOSEBERRY. 163 low bush form, the whites and reds usually from three to four feet high and wide, and the black four to six feet. An insect known as the currant-worm is often very de- structive. On its first appearance, if confined to a few leaves, these should be cut off, shoot and all, and de- stroyed. If they threaten to be troublesome, powdered white Hellebore, either dusted on, or mixed four ounces to a pailful of water and applied with a syringe, will de- stroy them at once. Black Naples.—This is the favorite black variety, and is used almost exclusively for jams and jellies. The black varieties are much less grown here than in Europe, but the taste for them is increasing. Red Dutch.—Color of berries deep red, of average size, flavor excellent. White Grape.—Berries large, of a yellowish-white color. The flavor of this variety is less acid than any other ; excellent for dessert. Versatlles.—The fruit much larger than the Red Dutch, and the best flavored of all the large-berried kinds. Cherry.—Berries larger than that of any other sort, but too acid for most tastes ; only suitable for jelly. GOOSEBERRY. The Gooseberry is a fruit better suited for the climate of Britain than for ours, and it is never seen here in the perfection it attains there. It ripens just when our hot- test weather occurs, forcing it unnaturally to maturity, and hence the absence of the size and flavor it attains when ripened at a lower temperature. The native varie- ties, though far inferior in quality, are usually more free from mildew, and are therefore most desirable for culti- vation here, as the fruit with us is more used in the green than in the ripe state. Gooseberries are planted from 104 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. three to four feet apart, and are treated in all other re- spects like Currant bushes. Downing.—A native variety of medium size, greenish- white when ripe, excellent quality. Houghton’s Seedling.—Also a native variety, size me- cium, color red, flavor average. Of the foreign varieties among Reds may be named as leading sorts, Warrington, Champion, Waterloo; of Greens, Green Globe, Melville, Green Gage; of Yellows, Sulphur, Champagne, Golden Drop; of, Whites, Crystal, Whitesmith, Dutch. FIGS. The Fig on account of it not being hardy in the north- ern states, is but little cultivated unless in tubs, which are placed in cellars or sheds to protect them during the winter months, or occasionally on the back wall of lean- to graperies ; but in all parts of the country where the thermometer does not get lower than twenty degrees above zero, they can be grown freely in the open air without protection. It is hardly ever necessary to prune the Fig, except to regulate its shape by cutting back any extra strong shoots. In sections of the country such as Maryland, or West Virginia, or Delaware, where it may require slight protection when grown in the open air, it should be planted against a wall or fence, and trained against 1t ;’on the approach of cold weather it should be laid down and covered as recommended for hardy grapes. When grown in tubs to be kept in cellars, sheds, or green- house pits, they should be placed under cover in this latitude early in November, kept as dry as possible with- out shrivelling, and set out in the open air again in May. ‘The soil and general treatment for plants grown in the open air in pots or tubs will be suitable for them. QUINCE—CHERRY. 165 There are numerous sorts in cultivation from which we select the following : White Genoa.—Large roundish, yellow skin ; flesh red- ish-pink, excellent flavor. Brown Turkey.—Pear shaped, average size, brown skin ; flesh red, rich flavor. Early Violet.—Skin brownish-red ; flesh reddish-crim- son, delicious flavor; fruit rather small; one of the hardiest. Brown Ischia.—Size large, skin yellowish-brown ; flesh violet, sweet and luscious, very prolific. QUINCE. A few Quince trees should be planted in every garden where there is any pretension to a collection of fruits. It is a tree requiring but little attention, and for that reason is often neglected, and very unsightly specimens are seen. The tree is very ornamental in flower and fruit, and by a little attention to pruning, a handsome head may be formed, though equally luxuriant crops are seen on trees that have been untouched for years, They may be planted eight or ten feet apart. In varieties the kind in most general use is the Apple-shaped or Orange.—A large round variety, bright golden-yellow. Pear-shaped is larger, color greenish-yellow, and its shape being more pear-like, readily distinguishes it from the other and better variety. Rea’s Seedling.—A variety not very abundant as yet, is the largest and finest of all. | CHERRY. The Cherry-tree begins to bear usually in two or three years after planting trees of the size sold at the nurseries, 166 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. and continues to annually enlarge in growth and produc- tiveness until it often attains a larger size than most of our fruit-trees. The Cherry grows freely in almost any soil that is free from moisture, preferring, however, like most other fruits, a deep loamy soil. The tree may be trained as desired, either in pyramidal form or with a round top, by pruning and directing the shoots. The distance apart may be ten or twelve feet. | Varieties : Black Tartarian.—Deep purplish-black, very large ; fine flesh, unsurpassed in quality ; last of June. fockport.—Very large, amber-yellow, dotted red ; flesh firm, sweet and excellent ; ripens in June. Coe’s Transparent.—Color pale-amber-yellow ; spotted with pink ; flesh tender, sweet, and of fine flavor ; ripens middle of June. May Duke.—Color dark-red, size medium, quality ex- cellent ; ripens early in June. Morello.—A sub-acid variety of medium size, color bright-red, changing to darker color when fully ripe ; hangs long on the tree, mainly used for pies and pre- serving. PLUM. The cultivation of the Plum is rendered nearly useless in most places by the attacks of the Curculio, or Plum Weevil. Every conceivable application to the trees has been tried without any satisfactory result. The only thing which will effectually save a crop in the districts infested by this insect, is to jar the tree in the morning or in cool days, first spreading sheets under the trees to catch the weevils, after which they may be burned. If this is begun as soon as the plums are formed, and per- sisted in every few days until they are ripe, a large share of the crop may be saved. This may be thought to be pay- ing rather dear for a crop of plums, but it is really the PLUM. 167 only way it can be secured. Many years ago the crop of a plum orchard under our charge numbering over a hun- dred large trees, was saved by this process, while all other plums in the district where the jarring of the trees was not resorted to, were completely destroyed. This plan was recommended nearly half a century ago, and no other practicable method has since been presented. It has been recommended by some to plant the trees on the bank of a pond or running stream, and train them to overhang the water, also to pave or cement around the roots so that the insect cannot burrow, but these plans would be often impossible, and are useless. Trees upon stiff, clayey soils are more exempt from the ravages of the Curculio than those upon light ones, probably for the reason that the insect in the grub or larve state cannot penetrate them so readily, as they must enter the ground to become perfect insects. The average distance at which the Plum may be planted is from ten to twelve feet. The following are distinct and fine sorts. Orleans.—Color purple, with a rich blue bloom, size medium ; flesh deep yellow, flavor of first quality ; cling- stone ; = ype in August. Washington.—Color yellow, marbled with red next the sun; large size; flesh firm, sweet, and rich ; freestone ; ripens first of September. Green Gage.—A well known variety, rather small in size, but of exquisite flavor, color greenish-yellow, spotted with red on the sunny side ; freestone ; ripens early in August. Columbia.—Of the largest size, color brownish-purple ; flesh yellow, sweet, and finely flavored ; freestone ; ripens the last of August. Golden Drop.—A very old and well known sort, color golden-yellow with red spots next the sun ; large, oval ; 168 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. rich and sweet yellowish flesh ; clingstone ; Tipens middle of September. PEACH. The Peach prefers the light, dry, and warm soils, known as sandy loams. The tree is shortlived in most sections, and attains its best fruiting condition usually when from five to nine years old. ‘The tree is greatly benefitted by pruning ; the growth of the previous sea- son should be shortened about one-third ; this, if annually followed from the time the trees are set, will give them compact heads instead of open, straggling ones, the branches of which will break down with the first full crop of fruit. In the peach-growing districts the culti- vators do not expect more than three crops in five years, and if they get two full crops in that time they are con- tent, and amateurs should expect no more. When a crop sets at all there is usually more fruit than the tree can carry and ripen; no fruit needs severe thinning more ~ than the peach. In bearing seasons half or two-thirds of those which set may be removed with benefit to the rest. When a tree appears sickly with yellow foliage, dig it up at once. ‘The distance apart may be from eight to ten feet. Among the favorite varieties for garden culture may be named Early Beatrice.—One of Mr. Rivers’ seedlings, and so far as tried in this country promises to be a valuable early sort; its size is small, but quality good ; freestone. Hale’s Early.—A very early peach, of fair size and great beauty, but has the fault that it in some localities rots just as it begins to ripen, a difficulty probably due to overbearing rather than to locality; freestone, excellent. Columbia.—Large, round, color yellow and red, streaked with dark-crimson ; flesh yellow, rich, and juicy, flavor excellent ; freestone ; ripens in September. NECTARINES., 169 Crawford’s Harly.—LLarge, roundish, color yellow, tinged with red ; flesh yellow, rich, and sweet; ripens last of August ; freestone. Crawford’s Late.—Similar in appearance, but ripening three weeks later. Cooledge’s Favorite.-Size medium, roundish oval, color clear white with crimson cheek ; flesh rich, juicy, and of first quality ; ripens in August; freestone. _ Honest John, or Early York.—ULarge, roundish, white with red cheek ; flesh white, very juicy, excellent flavor ; middle of August; freestone. Morris White.-—A well known variety, size medium, color greenish-white, flavor average. The variety mostly used for preserving ; middle of September ; freestone. Malacatune.—Fruit large, yellow, with dark red cheek ; flesh orange-yellow, flavor excellent ; middle of Septem- ber ; freestone. NECTARINES. Nectarines are only smooth skinned peaches, requiring in all respects similar treatment to the peach. ‘They are but little grown in this country, as they are equally lia- ble to injury by the attacks of the Plum Curculio, with the Plum itself. The same treatment recommended for its destruction in Plums, must be applied to the Nectarine. There is a peculiarity in the flavor of some varieties of Nectarines differing from that of any of the peaches, and by some they are greatly preferred to any peach in flavor. The successful varieties are not numerous. Early Newington.—Uarge, roundish oval, greenish- yellow mottled red; flesh yellowish-white ; September ; cling. Hunt's Tawny.—Large, round, amber-yellow with red cheek ; flesh orange, melting, flavor excellent ; ripens in _ August ; freestone. 170 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE, Boston.—Uarge, oval, yellow with mottled crimson cheek ; flesh yellow, excellent quality ; September ; free- stone. APRICOT. The Apricot is closely related to the peach, but belongs to another species; it is less juicy, and has a flavor quite distinct from, and by some preferred to, that of the peach. The blighting Curculio attacks the Apricot also, and its culture can only be successful by combating the difficulties that attend that of the plum, unless in special locations that seem few and far between. The'varieties are Moorpark.—Size large as an average peach, yellow with red cheek ; flesh orange, sweet, and of exquisite flavor ; ripens in July. Orange.—Pale yellow with red cheek, size medium ; ripens end of July. Turkey.—Uarge, deep yellow, shaded orange; flesh pale-yellow, firm, rich, and sweet; ripens in August. APPLE. The apple can only be grown in gardens asa dwarf, either kept in a bush form or trained as a pyramid or other shape. ‘The dwarf trees are made so by grafting on dwarfing stocks, while the varieties are the same as those found in the large trees of the orchard. ‘'T'wo sorts of dwarfing stocks are used by nurserymen, the Doucin and Paradise. Trees upon the Doucin will ultimately grow quite large, and as the Paradise is the only stock which makes really dwarf trees, the amateur who wishes to grow dwarf apple-trees should make sure that they are worked on Paradise stocks. Of course trees of this kind are not advised as a source of fruit, but there can scarcely be a handsomer object in the garden than a bush three feet high, and about the same through, loaded with enor- APPLE—PEARS. 171 mous apples. Dwarf apple-trees may be planted six feet apart each way, while ordinary trees in the orchard are given 15 to 30 feet, or even 40 feet. ‘The following sorts are recommended for garden culture. or descrip- tions see nursery catalogues. Red Astrachan, Alexander, Sweet Bough, Fall Pippin, Gravenstein, Maiden’s Blush, Porter, Rambo, Northern Spy, Mother, Twenty Ounce, Beauty of Kent, Hawthornden, Spitzenberg, Jonathan, King of Tompkins County, Keswick Codlin, Lady Apple, Red Canada, Swaar. PEARS, Like apples, are grown as dwarfs and standards. The former being planted from eight to ten feet apart, the latter from ten to twelve feet. The dwarfs, budded on the quince stock, are mostly used for garden culture, as from their habit they are more suitable, besides having the invaluable quality of coming quicker into bearing. Time was when the adage went, ‘‘ He that plants pears, plants for his heirs,” but this is now no more applicable to the pear than to the peach, for we now have fine crops of pears budded on the quince in three to five years from the time of planting. The trees may be grown as pyramids, or in the bush form, or in small gardens, pear, peach, and other trees are successfully trained in what is called the oblique cordon, which allows a number of varieties to be grown in a small space. Only a general outline of the method can be given here, referring for fuller details to Barry’s and other works on fruit culture. A trellis is built about 8 feet high, by nailing a strong top and bottom rail to posts, which should be about 8 feet apart. Slats of inch stuff are put on between the two rails at an angle of 30° ; these are fastened on with screws, as when the trees have reached the top, the slats are to be brought down to 45°, and they should be long enough to allow for doing 172 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. this. Young trees are set in an inclined position in a line with these slats, which are three feet apart. Hach tree is cut back to a few buds, and one shoot allowed to grow from the strongest bud, all the others being re- moved. This shoot asit grows is kept tied to the slat, and when it throws out side-shoots, as it soon will, they are pinched back to three or four leaves, whenever the shoot is sufficiently developed to allow the number of the leaves to be seen. By growing in this inclined i _ SSS ee ee t Fig. 67.—CORDON-TRAINING OF PEAR TREES. position, and by pinching every shoot back to three or four leaves, the tree is dwarfed and made to bear early, and when properly managed, forms a perfect cordon or garland, with fruit along its whole length. Fig. 67 shows a portion of a trellis of this kind. The following varieties are recommended for either kind of training. For descriptions see nursery catalogues. Bartlett, Beurré d’Anjou, Duchesse d’Angouléme, Lawrence, Clapp’s Favorite, Beurré Bosc, Dana’s Hovey, Vicar of Wink- field, Howell, Urbaniste, Seckel, Winter Nelis, Brandy- wine, Doyenné d’ Eté, Louise Bonne de Jersey, Belle Lucrative, Doyenné Boussock. VEGETABLE GARDEN. COTTAGE GARDENING—A DIGRESSION. Lea CHAPTER XLIX. COTTAGE GARDENING—A DIGRESSION. Before taking up the subject of vegetable culture, I will relate an incident connected with cottage gardening that may interest if it does not benefit some of those into whose hands this book may fall. About a dozen years ago I had the pleasure of making the acquaintance of a gen- tleman whose duties compelled him to be at his desk in a close office in the City of New York, from 9 o’clock A.M. to4p.mM. Being naturally of a weak constitution, his sedentary life soon made him the victim of dyspepsia to such a degree that he felt that he must soon resign his situation. He was then a man of forty, entirely ignorant of anything pertaining to country life, and it was with great misgivings and reluctance that, by the advice of his physician, he changed his home from a closely built part of New York to a cottage in the then country-like suburb of Bergen Heights, N. J. His means enabled _him to purchase a modest cottage built on a lot 50 by 150 feet ; he did not want the land, he said, but the cot- tage was such as he fancied, and the ground had to go with it. It was about this time that I formed his ac- quaintance, through some business transaction, and he asked my professional advice as to what he could do with his land, which he had already begun to consider some- what of an incumbrance. I replied to him that, if I was not greatly mistaken, in his little plot of ground lay a cure for all his bodily ills, and that besides it could add to the comforts if not the luxuries of his tableif he would only work it. ‘‘Iworkit!” heexclaimed. ‘* You don’t suppose that these hands could dig or delve,” holding up his thin and bloodless fingers, ‘‘and if they could I know 176 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. nothing about gardening.” I told him I thought neither objection insurmountable if he once begun. The result of our conversation was, that he resolved to try, and try he did to a purpose. Our interview was in March, and before the end of April he had his lot all nicely dug over, the labor being done by his own hands during an hour and a half each morning. His custom was to get up at six o’clock and work at his garden until half past seven. ‘This gave him ample time to dress, get breakfast, and be at his desk in the city by nine. The labor of merely digging was (to him) heavy and rather monotonous, but he stuck to it bravely, and when he again presented himself before me for plants and seeds and information as to what to do with them, it was with some pride that I saw my prescription had worked so well, for my friend then looked more like a farmer than a pallid clerk. The regulating of his little garden was a simple matter, and was done according to the following diagram : Cauliflower, cabbage and lettuce. Strawberries. Cucumbers, onions, and parsley. Raspberries. Beets, carrots, and parsnips. Tomatoes. Bush beans. Asparagus and Rhubarb. During his first season, of course, he made some blun- ders and some failures, but his interest in the work in- creased year by year. His family was supplied with an abundance of all the fresh vegetables and fruits his lim- ited space could admit of being grown—a supply that it would have taken at least $150 to purchase at retail, and _ stale at that. But the benefit derived from the cultiva- THE VEGETABLE GARDEN. 177 tion of this cottage garden was health—strong, rugged health—that for the six years he was my neighbor, never once failed him. I know this case is an extremely exceptional one, for I never knew another man who so resolutely worked him- self into health. There are hundreds of business men, book-keepers, salesmen, clerks, and the like who live in the suburbs of all great cities, many of whom can ill afford to pay for the keeping of the plots surrounding their cottages, but who think they can far less afford to do the work themselves. As a consequence, in nine cases out of ten, the rear, at least, of their suburban plots is a wilderness of weeds. But this is not the least of the evils, the owner has a certain amount of muscular force, and this, be it more or less, being unused, its possessor pays the penalty of his laziness in dyspepsia, and a host of other ills. The proofs are apparent everywhere that garden operations are conducive to health and longevity. The work is not unduly laborious, and when fairly en- tered into has a never-failing interest. The growing and the watching of the great variety of plants gives a healthy tone to the mind, while the physical labor de- manded by cultivation takes care of the body. CHAPTER L. THE VEGETABLE GARDEN. It is perhaps best that the space allotted to vegetables should be at one side of the garden, and that for fruits at the other, at least in the beginning, though a rotation of crops or change of position may be advantageous in course of time. I will give in brief the culture of each 178 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. vegetable in general use, placing them alphabetically for easy reference, and enumerate the leading varieties. ASPARAGUS—(Asparagus officinalis.) Asparagus should be planted the first spring that the owner comes into possession of the land, and if the house is yet to be built, let the Asparagus-bed be planted at once, as it takes the roots two or three years to acquire sufficient strength to giveacrop. Foran ordinary family _ a bed of six rows of fifty or sixty feet in length, and three feet apart, will be sufficient, the plants in the rows being set nine inches apart. In planting it is custo- mary to use two-year-old plants, but it often happens that as large a plant is raised from seed in good soils in one year as in a poorer soil in two years; in such cases the one-year-old plant is preferable. The preparation of the Asparagus bed should be made with more care than for most vegetables, from the fact that it is a permanent crop which ought to yield as well at the end of twenty-five as of five years, if the soil has been well prepared. The asparagus bed, to start with, should be on ground thoroughly drained, either naturally or ar- tificially, and if choice can be had, ona rather light sandy loam. ‘This should be trenched and mixed with suffi- cient manure to form a coating of at least six inches thick over the bed ; this manure should be worked into the soil by trenching to the depth of two feet, as the roots of the plant will reach quite that depth in a few years. In setting, the crowns of the plants should be placed at least three inches below the surface. It makes but little difference whether it is planted in spring or fall; if in spring, it should be done as early as the ground is dry enough to work, and if in fall, just as soon as the plants can be had, which is usually in the early part of October. We prefer fall planting on light, well- ASPARAGUS. 179 drained soils, for the reason that if it is done then, young roots are formed, which are ready to grow on the ap- proach of spring, but if the planting is done in March or April, this formation of new roots has to take place then, and causes a corresponding delay in growth. Plants are sold by market gardeners and seedsmen, and as it will save a year or two, to purchase them, it is not worth while to raise them from seed in a private garden. The edible portion is the undeveloped stems, which if cut away as soon as they appear, are followed by others, which start from the crown of the plant. The cutting, Fig. 68,— ASPARAGUS. if continued too long, would finally exhaust the root, hence it is customary to stop cutting as soon as early peas become plenty, and allow the remaining shoots to grow during the remainder of the season, and thus accumulate sufficient strength in the plant to allow it to produce an- other “crop of shoots the next season. The engraving, (fig. 68), represents a strong plant with the earth re- 180 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. moved from the roots ; the shoots are shown in different stages of development, and it will be seen how readily careless cutting may injure the buds which are ready to produce a succession of shoots. The surface of the Aspargus bed should have a top- dressing of three or four inches of rough stable manure every fall, (November), which should be lightly forked into the bed in spring. The best variety is what is known as ** Van Sicklen’s Colos- sal.” In some localities Asparagus is attacked by an insect called the Asparagus Beetle. The best method of getting rid of this pest, that we have found, is to coop up a hen and let the chickens pick up the insects and their eggs. ARTICHOKE-GLOBE— (Cynara Scolymus.) ll pI Fig. 69.—GLOBE ARTICHOKE. The portion used of this plant is the unde- veloped flower cluster, or the portion which is known as the scales of the involucre. They are boiled and served with drawn butter, but outside of France do not seem to be very generally appreciated. The plants are propagated first by seeds, sown in a hot-bed in March, and planted out at distances of from two to three feet. It is not always hardy enough for our winters in the northern states, though it proves so in all latitudes south of Wash- ARTICHOKE—BEAN. 181 ington. Here it is necessary on the approach of winter to draw the leaves together and earth up around them, and later to cover the tops with litter. ARTICHOKE, JERUSALEM—(Helianthus tuberosus.) This is an entirely different plant from the above, but as the two are sometimes confounded, we give engravings of both. The edible portion of this is the tuber, while that of the Globe Arti- ane choke is the scales sur- hs rounding the flowers. <2 __ The tubers of the™ Jerusalem Artichoke somewhat resemble the potato in appearance, and the plant produces immense crops. But few persons in this country like the flavor, and it is rarely grown unless for stock or as a curiosity. _ Its culture is similar to the potato; it has stems, leaves, and flowers, much like the common sunflower. BEAN, (Phaseolus vulgaris var. nanus.)—BUSH, SNAP, OR KIDNEY. An indispensable vegetable, of easy cultivation, grow- ing freely on almost any soil, though on well enriched land, it will be more prolific in quantity and more tender in quality. It is a plant of tropical origin, and like all such, should not be sown until the weather is settled and warm, and all danger from frostispast. In this latitude, the time of sowing should not be sooner than the 15th of May. Sow at intervals of two or three weeks, all through the season, if wanted for use. Seed may be sown in drills 18 to 24 inches apart, and three inches deep, dropping the seeds at distances of two or three inches in the drills, and covering to the general level. To such as use them all through the season, three or four quarts would be re- 182 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. quired, although a quart at one sowing would give an am- ple quantity for any average family. The varieties most in use at present are Harly Valentine, Harly China, Mo- hawk, Fejee, Black Wax, and Lhefugee. BEAN—POLE OR RUNNING, (Phaseolus vulgaris),-AND LIMA, (Phaseolus lunatus). Pole Beans are usually cultivated in hills three or four feet apart. The poles, (which are best made of young cedar trees), should be nine or ten feet high, and firmly fixed at least eighteen inches deep in the ground, and the hills formed around them by digging up the soil and mixing it with a shovelful of well rotted manure, or an ounce or so of guano or bone-dust, if the stable manure is not attainable ; put in either case let the mixing be thorough. The hills should be but two or three inches above the general level, and at least eighteen inches in diameter. The term “hill” isan unfortunate one, as it often leads inexperienced persons to suppose that a tall heap must be made, and it is a common mistake to form miniature hills often a foot or more in hight, upon which to sow seeds or set plants ; the effect of this is to confine the roots to this small high and dry space. When the word ‘“‘ hill” is used in this work, it is to indicate the place plants are to occupy, and unless some hight is mentioned, it is not above the general level. After the hill has been properly formed around the pole, from five to six beans should be planted around it at a depth of two inches, but the planting should never be done in this latitude before the 20th of May. In all our experience as seedsmen, we know of no seed that is so universally replanted as Lima Beans. I think it safe to say, that at least half of all the people who buy, plant before the ground is dry and warm, and then tell us that the seed must have been bad, because it rotted in the ground, In BEAN—BEET. - 183 the hurry of business we have not always time to explain why they rotted, and would here state for the sake of our- selves and cotemporaries, that the reason why the Limas fail to grow in 99 cases out of 100, is, that they are planted too early, and that it is no fault of the seed, which is rarely imperfect. The proper method of planting Lima Beans is to push each one singly into the soil, with the eye downward ; the embryo is so very broad and flat that it is difficult for it to turn itself as smaller seeds do when placed in a wrong position. The Large White Lima is the variety that is most prized. The Giant Wax makes pods nine inches in length, and is a very productive variety. The London Horticultural is used as snaps or shelled. The Scarlet Runner is a highly ornamental variety, producing dazzling scarlet flowers during the whole summer. It is used mainly asasnap bean. Lima Beans are usually only planted once in this latitude, as they take nearly the whole season to mature. From thirty to fifty poles are sufficient for ordinary use; this will re- quire from one to two quarts of seed. BEET, (Beta vulgaris.) Sow in shallow drills twelve to eighteen inches apart in April or May, dropping the seeds so that they will fall an inch or so apart. When the plants have grown to the hight of about two inches, thin out, so that they will stand four inches apart. When the roots are three inches in diameter, they are fit for use. Of course they are used when much larger, but the younger they are, the more delicate and tender. The varieties cultivated are lim- ited to a few : 184 GARDENING FOR PLEASURE. Early Egyptian.—A round, deep red variety, is the earliest. Early Bassano.—A light salmon colored variety. Early Blood Turnip. —Later than either of the above, but best for =~. general crop. ) Long Smooth Red.— 4, oesaeonace 165 Nectarines, Varieties of............ 169) || Quince, Varietiesiof. ..2.0.2...-..-. 165 Oats with Grass Seed.............. el ORRIN eee, Sos Seta heehee 212 CLT ees ae ie mera es eR emer mbt) s RASHMCELY 59/02 css os. mein naee eee 158 ATOMS ieee error aes 208 | Raspberry, Varieties of............ 160 iEnisl GN a. Saree oocadaonepde seooodce 208 | Raspberries, Black Cap............ 161 LEEDRV Cs ROP en on ae appre oe 209 | Raspberries, Black Caps, Varieties Ass oi ose katie eve ise atau caees 209 1 Set ACR MR rsh oy Sol a et Seen 161 I EVESTY cl 1 Renee Rey ORL BE cg a a SEA LOS cP Led SS DICE. 2. s50 eo eee eee ,o60 Pench... Varieties Of-3- 5. s..52 2.505. 168.|- Re-potting Plants. ........2...5.<. 61 PARES ©. 2a. genni ta cian eels tS IEM UPL 74 os gi ag ee DN 212 Pears, Varieties Of .<.00.< 53. hosa, 0c 1 +) Road: Drain. 2 ces) 2s. ase reeen ee 16 Pear-Trees, Cordon-Trained........ DiS) VISOR Baie s 22. Goes coe wie caioewaee 2 116 BEDPEP (oo: js jade neees Owe Keisele ade adn Sense Clie sk SS kisc, Goa ceeceee 116 PE URCE Geass sos ied ass ose eee ins 196 | Roses, Propagating................ 44 IPI: SUBKEN, .. 6 Sak wesors oases eee Doe rIEEE WS: ox cme ob ae oak ahc.xe’slepe'e cys 213 Pits without Artificial Heat........ ELS AShs i Lot gag 5 Cc “ane A a 214 Plant Protector, Bryants? 2. .:.... 2. SiGe he eet COL SPLOT SOUS os serene caries cies 81 Plants for Summer Decoration..... 69 | Scale, Brown and White........... 119 Plants for Wardian Cases.......... oo tg Migs 2970) (s62 le ba ee 214 Blantss Hrozenteen syeiccn sayscescie oe 121) |). Sereenssfor Plants. 2...2 22sec. es 126 Plants,.Growing from Cuthines:... 42°| Sea Kale... ic eecn ec oclecse 215 Plants, Growing from Seeds....... 39 | Seeds, Tropical..................-- 59 Blants) Hot-House}).. 2.0.2. -. - see Gs: Seeds Anmnnale. 5.0: ccc. cwccese 112 Binntsim ROOMS); cec 2202... cocoa eee 82 SOU SPOS. < btiob cus. 2 caskets te 60° | "Wash for Glass:..55.. Seen eeeueees 127 Spinach 4:4. ees see eee aga 216 | Watering Potted Plants............ 62 Spinach, New Zealand............. Qlie |, WANGOW. BOX. ccc cee eee 67 Spinach, Substitutes for........... 217° | Worm, Angle® oc... ..:.:ca.c ae 119 NQUSSH es see ees AAS Raia ted 218 | Monthly Calendar of Operations. . .234 Strawberry, Forcing. :.:2.20..2...0. 157 SANUALY scatters ae eee Ee 234 Strawberry, Growing.............. 153 HM ebDIUaky ric eseet ees 235 Strawberry Runners in Pots....... 154 Marches cos nace eee 236 Strawberry, Varieties of........... 157 Apriliss:..iistcinds til deidce See 237 SWechsPOtatonsmeeuccnccaoematoree 219 May*s.chiee pverdge weap Chee 238 SDRTUPS) es aae ste s sine eRe ee es 119 PUNE os ssadisisscets cence nares 239 Tobacco-Water for Plants.......... 64 JULY nescis cence ake eee 240 Tomatozee..- Weve ele rte Savoie 's oelos 221 AUGUST \c5 5 coe ce eeeeeenee 241 Tomato Seeds, Starting ........... 59 September...............-... 242 Trees, List of Evergreen........... 106 October.........-.----2605 «. 242 Trees, (Praning Mroity. :2).927 2s 133 NOVEMDOR. 2. 4p cele 244 PDaLIpS; (PIANRE Noe xe oases os 36 December: 23525 + sntseceeurer 245 GARDENING FOR PROFIT: A GUIDE TO THE SUCCESSFUL CULTIVATION OF THE MARKET AND FAMILY GARDEN. By PETER HENDERSON. PINELZ ILLUSTRATED. This work has had a constant and remarkable sale ever since it was issued, and the later enlarged and revised edition is as well received as was the first. It was the first work on Market Gardening ever published in this country. Its author is well known as a market gardener of many years’ successful experience. In this work he has recorded this experience, and given without reservation, the methods necessary to the profitable culture of the MARKET GARDEN. It is a work for which there was an urgent demand before its issue, and one which commends itself, not only to those who grow vegetables for sale, but to the cultivator of the FAMILY GARDEN, to whom it presents methods quite different from the old ones generally practiced. It is an ORIGINAL AND PURELY AMERICAN work, and not made up as books on gar- dening too often are, by quotations from foreign authors. Every thing is made perfectly plain, and the subject treated in all its details, from the selection of the soil to preparing the products for market. CONTENTS. Men fitted for the Business of Gardening. The Amount of Capital Required, and Working Force per Acre. Profits of Market Gardening. Location, Situation, and Laying Out. Soils, Drainage, and Preparation. Manures, Implements. Uses and Management of Cold Frames. Formation and Management of Hot-beds. Forcing Pits or Greenhouses. Seeds and Seed Raising. How, When, and Where to Sow Seeds. Transplanting Insects. Packing of Vegetables for Shipping. Preservation of Vegetables in Winter. Vegetables, their Varieties and Cultivation. In the last chapter, the most valuable kinds are described, and the culture proper to each is given in detail. Sent post-paid, price $1.50. ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 245 Broadway, New-York. PRACTICAL FLORICULTURE, A GUIDE TO THE SUCCESSFUL PROPAGATION AND CULTIVATION OF EtOrists. Piants: BY PETER HENDERSON, BERGEN CITY, N, J. ————-s 8 ¢—___—— | Mr. HENDERSON is known as the largest Commercial Florist in the country. In the present work he gives a full account of his pee of propagation and cultivation. It is adapted to the wants of the amateur as well as the professional grower. The scope of the work may be judged from the following TABLE OF CONTENTS, Aspect and Soil. Orchid Culture. Laying out Lawn and Flower Garden. Designs for Flower Gardens. Planting of Flower Beds. Soils for Potting. Temperature and Mcisture. The Potting of Plants. Cold Frames—Winter Protection. Construction of Hot-Beds. Greennouse Structures. Modes of Heating. Propagation by Seeds. Propagation by Cuttings. Propagation of Lilies. Culture of the Rose. Culture of the Verbena. Culture of the Tuberose. Holland Bulbs. Cape Bulbs. Winter-Flowering Plants Construction of Bouquets. Hanging Baskets. Window Gardening. Rock-Work. Insects. Nature’s Law of Colors. Packing Plants. Plants by Mail. Profits of Floriculture. Soft-Wooded Plants. Greenhouse Plants. Annuals. Hardy Herbaceous Plants. Diary of Operations for each Day of the Year. IF LUSTRATED. SENT POST-PAID. PRICE, $1.50 ORANGE JUDD & COMPANY, 245 BROADWAY, New-York Gee fa higetian PRN Ve ae Catches Tht iy ‘ y ay Ace en ae : a ue i ud on } , ® » 2 i \ Re Rina eA GiB Gah, sen ein lene eae cir Com y Py PAS SUAVE eve @ i nee i eae ae ie Ur ey Le Tie Tw. Tuk he Ook aD BPA I Re eC a ee ae ee a ha i tyeey AL ts 1) by a, rAd -s a aaa oi SR aL 8 Haay a \ at ‘ ae = ' 4 bel ~ in Riieog Vidar ‘Prov MY | Aa uns yl ’» tg b} err Wyvaryghero ob Wy Ferri." Hit Son bee Pah Ag 97 ee 7 2 pa re at Cay Berranrs \wn haw a . Clete ed Ae eS ‘we. Vive & bilge z bive's ft ae it Plas * ey. hie hs, ae ur Ae es Wee aay are ce oy lt ; p i Py, 1p denn a We Wh “aa i Aa a7) rb) | tw _ ae * opel FAEN WE Mie saga Daprel We Dama: ales Pd ie OLS _ ‘Voss ih ae ute a Bs SNe aN, eis is Le th panher tin sta facial 4 #s ve fi ial My ( Via iy ~ ‘ aah *\ : ) pet ya AS ' 4 4 fg : Wie WV \ ] li 8 nee : hp Gael sg a ag ARR tA FS mene, =~ a R face 2 = = - ? mee Se ee : . roa S 2 > . : an Z a 2 = SEA eo a - * "onl * Pi ‘ - rm vt Tt ~3¢ ; ot eet : ie - pod =, 39. fa é - - ‘ r bias " ; “ ; , . . Pees a ee ooo - ¢ re 7 ye — 2 : : . <9 Pysery ome - . mies B. het iy? - Y eek sR >. 3 aye eabopet aga est 4, 6, Bye Pe SF ee SN ane pa ms rate Seats b Sos erat . eae