The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 669 pages of information about The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots.

The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 669 pages of information about The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots.
sufficient space to produce a tufty habit of growth.  A gentle heat will start them, and they will give no trouble afterwards, except on one point, which happens to be of considerable importance.  It is that the plants should never be allowed to produce a flower while in pots or boxes.  Pick off every bud until they are in final positions, and then, having taken hold of the soil, they will bloom profusely until the end of the season.

Lobelias make elegant pot plants, yet, with the exception of the =ramosa= varieties which are excellent for the purpose, they cannot be grown satisfactorily in pots.  The difficulty is easily surmounted by putting them out a foot apart in a good open position, and if possible in a rather stiff soil.  When they have developed into fine clumps lift them with care and place them in pots, avoiding injury to the roots.  This method will produce a display of colour which cannot be attained by exclusive pot culture.

From the best strains of seed it is possible that a few plants may revert to long-lost characters.  Florists are striving to obviate this, but it will require time.  Meanwhile there are two ways of dealing with the difficulty.  Some growers prefer to raise plants from seed, and take cuttings from approved specimens for the next season.  This plan insures exactitude in height and colour, with almost the robust growth and free-flowering qualities of seedlings.  But it necessitates holding a stock through the winter, and this may be a serious matter to many.  The simpler proceeding, and one which answers well in practice, is to raise seedlings annually and to remove from the pans or boxes any plants which show the least deviation from the true type.  A few kept as a reserve will replace faulty specimens which may be detected after planting out.

The handsome perennial section of Lobelias obtains less attention than it deserves, especially as the most ordinary routine culture will suffice for these plants.  They are partial to moisture, and also to a deep rich loam.  A sowing on moderate heat in February or March will secure plants fit for bedding out in May.  They may also be grown entirely without the aid of artificial heat from sowings in June or July.  Employ pots or seed-pans, and pot off singly immediately the plants are large enough to handle.  The protection of a cold frame or hand-light is all that is necessary during winter, and the planting out may be done in May.  These Lobelias reach two feet in height, and make excellent companions to such flowers as =Anemone japonica alba= and =Hyacinthus candicans=.  The dark metallic foliage and dazzling scarlet flowers also have an imposing effect as the back row of a ribbon border.

==Lupinus==

==Lupine.  Hardy annual and hardy perennial==

Both the annual and the perennial Lupines are extremely valuable for garden decoration and for supplying an abundance of cut blooms.  Each class includes a number of charming colours and many of the flowers are delightfully scented.  Not the least of their merits is the fact that Lupines are not particular as to soil; indeed, the annual sorts will often thrive on ground that is too poor for other and more fastidious subjects.

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The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.