Horticultural Register, And Gardener's Magazine V.1 1835

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From this, it appears to me that this onion does not require a rich soil, and that from some peculiarity in the growth of the bulb, it in- creases in size as the difficulty increases for the roots to penetrate into the earth. There is a passage in the communication of a valu- able correspondent of our Register, (see page 87) which confirms this ; and, in sowing onion seed of all sorts, the best method is to spread the seed on the surface, and then tread or roll the bed pretty hard. J. E. T.
NOT
...ICES FROM FOREIGN PUBLICATIONS.
The following are from The Annals of the Society of Horticulture, at Paris, for April, 1835. We do not place quotation marks as signs of simple extracts, for they are rather condensations of such se- lections from information contained in this valuable work, as we think may be applicable to the state of horticulture in this country.
On the Exposure of the Roots of Trees to the Action of drying Winds and Frosts. We think it interesting to the nurseryman, the horticulturist and the farmer, in fact to all who may be concerned in the transportation or transplanting of trees, to give some account of the result of the experiments laid before the Society of Horticulture, at Paris, on the sensibility of the roots of trees.


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