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.

==Chionodoxa==

==Glory of the Snow==

The varied blue tints of the Chionodoxa, its more open blossoms, and larger size, distinguish this flower from its older and justly prized rival, the Scilla.  Indeed, the Chionodoxa is exquisitely beautiful, and of great value for pot culture, beds, or borders.  Five bulbs may be grown in a 48-sized pot, and in the border not less than half a dozen should be planted in a group.  Employed as a single or double line, it also produces a striking bit of colouring.  The bulbs should be planted in autumn four inches deep, the distance between being not more than three inches.  Any ordinary garden soil will grow this flower, and it is advisable to allow the bulbs to remain undisturbed for several years, as the effect will be the greater in each succeeding spring.

==Crocus==

This brilliant harbinger of spring will thrive in any soil or situation, but to be brought to the highest possible perfection it should be grown in an open bed or border of deep, rich, dry sandy loam.  The bulbs should be planted during September, October, and November.  If kept out of the ground after the end of the year they will be seriously damaged, and however carefully planted, will not flower in a satisfactory manner.  Plant three inches deep in lines, clumps, or masses, as taste may suggest, putting the bulbs two inches apart.  If convenient, let them remain undisturbed two or three years, and then take them up and plant again in well-prepared and liberally manured soil.  A bed of mixed Crocuses has a pleasing appearance, but in selecting bulbs for the geometric garden it is more effective to employ distinct colours, reserving the yellow for the exterior parts of the design to define its boundaries, and using the blue and the white in masses and bands within.  In districts where sparrows attack the flowers, they may be deterred from doing mischief by stretching over the beds a few strands of black thread, which will not interfere with the beauty of the display, and will terrify the sparrows for a sufficient period to save the flowers.

The named varieties are invaluable for pot and frame culture, and to force for decorative purposes; for though the individual flowers are short-lived, the finest bulbs yield a long succession of bloom, and in character Crocuses are quite distinct from all other flowers of the same early season.  When grown in pots and baskets, the bulbs should be placed close together to produce a striking effect.  A light, rich soil is desirable, but they may be flowered in a mixture of charcoal and moss, or in fibre, or moss alone.  When required in quantity for ornamental baskets and similar receptacles, it is wise to plant them in shallow boxes filled with rotten manure and leaf-mould, and to lift them out separately, and pack them when in flower in the ornamental baskets.  A perfect display of flowers in precisely the same stage of development can thus be secured, and successional displays may follow as long as supplies remain in the boxes.

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